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Chapter 6. The Camel Humps prosodic pattern

Listing for disaffiliating in spoken Hebrew
  • Nadav Matalon
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Building Categories in Interaction
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Building Categories in Interaction

Abstract

This chapter presents an analysis of a common prosodic pattern in spoken Hebrew. The pattern is characterized by a repetition of high rise-fall pitch movements, which visualize as successive “humps” in the pitch curve.1 Based on analysis of naturally occurring conversations, I show that speakers use this pattern to construct open lists of reinforcements for a counter-stance they take. In some cases, the use of the pattern is itself the act of taking a counter-stance, that is, in such cases the disaffiliation between the stance-takers is only prosodically cued. Such cases demonstrate that prosodic list patterns are used not only for the task of enumerating items under one category, but also as a resource for complex interactional activities.

The structure of the chapter is as follows. In Section 1, I introduce the premises underlying this study and describe the data. Section 2 includes a formal analysis of the pattern, followed by a functional analysis in Section 3. Conclusions are drawn in Section 4.

Abstract

This chapter presents an analysis of a common prosodic pattern in spoken Hebrew. The pattern is characterized by a repetition of high rise-fall pitch movements, which visualize as successive “humps” in the pitch curve.1 Based on analysis of naturally occurring conversations, I show that speakers use this pattern to construct open lists of reinforcements for a counter-stance they take. In some cases, the use of the pattern is itself the act of taking a counter-stance, that is, in such cases the disaffiliation between the stance-takers is only prosodically cued. Such cases demonstrate that prosodic list patterns are used not only for the task of enumerating items under one category, but also as a resource for complex interactional activities.

The structure of the chapter is as follows. In Section 1, I introduce the premises underlying this study and describe the data. Section 2 includes a formal analysis of the pattern, followed by a functional analysis in Section 3. Conclusions are drawn in Section 4.

Heruntergeladen am 27.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1075/slcs.220.06mat/html
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