17:10
Looking at stress patterns.
The reason I scare-quoted stress is that it's pretty accepted that Ancient Greek was tonal, and perhaps also Ancient Latin for sufficiently ancient values of Ancient.
And you're right that I was being squishy with swapping around stress and length and tone as though they could be considered one thing.
It's far from clear whether any stress patterns from Latin persist into English. One would think not. But there are patterns in Latin imports that suggest it somewhat may have.
The colocation spume of lies is an odd one in English. I get the idea that folks are conflating spume with spew and so thinking it a fount of lies rather than a foam of them.
Right, fountain of lies isn't unheard of. The rest basically are.
> All their accusations — spume of lies — he hears [1900]
> Doubt, hate, rage, shame, set with a spume of lies. [1883]
> Keep thy spirit calm and pure, How fierce soe'er the storm may rise ; Stand thou in the truth secure 'Mid surge of hate and spume of lies. The darker night, the brighter day ! [1861]
Yes, they're using it like surge. That isn't right. :/
No froth was found from this geyser.
> A great white spume of water, much heavier than he had seen before, was pouring over the dam, creating its dancing mist of spray.
> The body of the aircraft hit the water with an enormous splash and at once a white spume of spray rose out of it, hung for a second and cascaded back on to it, settling itself into a white circle about the remains of the Junkers 88, which still ...
Hm, I would have said spray of spume not spume of spray, but maybe.
> Rivers of warm currents move in channels beneath the surface of the sea, and soft winds gather up the spume of the sea.
Oh my, they called salt the "spume of Typhon"!
> Lying beside the road with outstretched neck and a spume of white froth on nose and muzzle are the horses of the 2nd Mounted Brigade; with bodies swollen by the decomposition that sets in so rapidly in this sun, and smelling to high heaven, ...
Well, at least all uses aren't catachrestic.
> For the purity of his blood was turned into another mode, so that, instead of purity, he now ejects the spume of semen.
This category contains English irregular plurals formed by changing a final “-s” into “-des”. This category does not contain English plurals ending in an "-des" that are formed by merely placing a final "-s" at the end of a word ending in "-de", or by merely placing a final "-es" at the end of a word ending in a "-d". For example, trades is formed by adding an "-s" to trade, while leudes is formed by adding an "-es" to leud, so neither is included in this category....