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7 Prosody beyond the word

  • Siri G. Tuttle
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Abstract

This chapter will discuss the study of prosodic effects that extend beyond single words in connected speech. These patterns are realized in contrasts in pitch, duration, and loudness. They represent both extensions of and interactions between different prosodic systems such as word stress, lexical tone, and phrase and utterance intonation. While it can be difficult to pull together information of this type from written sources on North American Indigenous languages, there is valuable information to be gathered even from the oldest grammatical descriptions. More recently, linguists increasingly address the prosody of connected speech in their descriptions.

Abstract

This chapter will discuss the study of prosodic effects that extend beyond single words in connected speech. These patterns are realized in contrasts in pitch, duration, and loudness. They represent both extensions of and interactions between different prosodic systems such as word stress, lexical tone, and phrase and utterance intonation. While it can be difficult to pull together information of this type from written sources on North American Indigenous languages, there is valuable information to be gathered even from the oldest grammatical descriptions. More recently, linguists increasingly address the prosody of connected speech in their descriptions.

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