Danish Stød: Laryngealization or Tone
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Nina Grønnum
Abstract
In the light of previous acoustic analyses of Danish stød and Danish intonation, we discuss two different phonological theories. In one, stød is an autonomous laryngeal syllable prosody. In the other, stød is the phonetic manifestation of an HL tonal pattern compressed within one syllable. The tonal representation is found to be contradicted by the phonetic reality, and it cannot account for the structurally determined alternation between non-stød and stød in inflection and derivation, nor for latent stød or stød in compounds. Furthermore, stød patterns are largely constant across regional varieties of Danish, but tonal patterns over the relevant structural domains are highly variable. Thus, stød may occur on any kind of tonal configuration, anywhere in the speaker's pitch range, a variability which is hard to reconcile with a fixed HL representation.
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Front and Back Matter
- Front & Back Matter
- Original Paper
- The Tonal Space of Contrastive Five Level Tones
- From Communicative Functions to Prosodic Forms
- Danish Stød: Laryngealization or Tone
- Asymmetries in English Vowel Perception Mirror Compression Effects
- Listener Expectations and Gender Bias in Nonsibilant Fricative Perception
- Further Section
- Book Notice
- Publications Received for Review
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Front and Back Matter
- Front & Back Matter
- Original Paper
- The Tonal Space of Contrastive Five Level Tones
- From Communicative Functions to Prosodic Forms
- Danish Stød: Laryngealization or Tone
- Asymmetries in English Vowel Perception Mirror Compression Effects
- Listener Expectations and Gender Bias in Nonsibilant Fricative Perception
- Further Section
- Book Notice
- Publications Received for Review