The Structure of Intonational Meaning: Evidence from English |
Contents
Preface | 9 |
General Introduction and Review of Past Work | 11 |
Evidence for the Rhythmic Nature of Prominence | 34 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accent analyses accent placement accented syllable all-or-none American analysis argue assume assumption Bolinger Bolinger's British calling Chapter configurations constituent content words context contradiction contour contrastive stress cues deaccenting discussion elephantiasis English intonation example explain fall-rise tone falling-rising French Toast function fundamental frequency gradient grammatical high-rise hypothesis iconic ideophonic interpretation intonation center intonation contours intonational lexicon intonational meaning involved Jackendoff John language lexical linguistic low-rise morphemes narrow focus normal stress notion noun nuclear tones nucleus paralanguage paralinguistic phenomena phenomenon phonemes phonesthesia phonological phrase pitch accent pitch contours pitch levels pitch movement pitch obtrusion pitch peak pitch range pretonic accent prominence question relation rhythm rhythmic structure rise Schmerling Schmerling's seems seen segmental semantic sentence stress sequence signal simply Slaughterhouse-Five Sledd speaker specific stylized fall stylized intonation suggests suprasegmental syntactic taxonomy tion tone languages traditional Trager and Smith Trager-Smith tunes utterance Vanderslice and Ladefoged vowel