Results 161 to 170 of about 938 (198)

Intonational phonology of the regional varieties of Italian [PDF]

open access: yes, 2015
This book offers the first comprehensive description of the prosody of nine Romance languages that takes into account internal dialectal variation. Teams of experts examine the prosody of Catalan, French, Friulian, Italian, Occitan, Portuguese, Romanian,
Giuliano Bocci   +2 more
exaly   +2 more sources
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Data-driven intonational phonology

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2013
Intonational Phonology deals with the systematic way in which speakers effectively use pitch to add appropriate emphasis to the underlying string of words in an utterance. Two widely discussed aspects of pitch are the pitch accents and boundary events.
Gopala Krishna Anumanchipalli   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Bengali intonational phonology

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2006
Previous studies of Bengali intonation are primarily concerned with the mapping between syntax and intonation, the existence of accentual and phonological phrases, optionality in phrasing, and realization of focus. While these studies have been influential, they shy away from a full description of Bengali intonation, drawing from a small data set ...
openaire   +1 more source

Intonational Analysis and Prosodic Annotation of Greek Spoken Corpora [PDF]

open access: yes, 2005
This chapter provides an analysis of the prosodic and intonational structure of Greek within the autosegmental/metrical framework of intonational phonology, and presents Greek ToBI (GRToBI), a system for the annotation of Greek spoken corpora based on ...
Amalia Arvaniti   +2 more
exaly   +3 more sources

The Phonology of Tone and Intonation

2004
Tone and Intonation are two types of pitch variation, which are used by speakers of all languages in order to give shape to utterances. More specifically, tone encodes segments and morphemes, and intonation gives utterances a further discoursal meaning that is independent of the meanings of the words themselves.
openaire   +2 more sources

Varieties of Italian and their intonational phonology

2015
The Italian language is characterized by an extremely strong phonetic and phonological variation that differentiates the language across space, communicative situations, social groups and socio-economic classes, and means of communication (Berruto 2010, 2012).
Gili Fivela, Barbara   +9 more
openaire   +3 more sources

The intonational phonology of Mongolian

2014
AbstractThis chapter describes tonal features of Halh Mongolian. Mongolian belongs to edge-prominence languages: Halh speakers either use available boundary tones or insert a tonal boundary for different pragmatic meanings. Most tonal variation occurs utterance finally, while phrasing and focusing are signaled phrase initially at the left edge of ...
openaire   +1 more source

The phonology of tone and intonation in the Dutch dialect of Venlo

Journal of Linguistics, 1999
The Dutch dialect of Venlo has a lexical tone opposition comparable to the distinction between Accent I and Accent II in Scandinavian. The two word tone patterns are realised in a variety of different ways, depending on the intonation contour, on whether the word has a focus tone, and on whether it occurs finally or nonfinally in the intonational ...
Gussenhoven, C., Vliet, P. van der
openaire   +2 more sources

Intonation and interpretation: phonetics and phonology

Speech Prosody 2002, 2002
Item does not contain ...
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The phonetics and phonology of Estonian intonation

2018
This thesis is not available on this repository until the author agrees to make it public. If you are the author of this thesis and would like to make your work openly available, please contact us: thesis@repository.cam.ac.uk.
openaire   +1 more source

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