Information structure and phrase length as predictors of AP-initial accents

This study addresses the relationship between information structure and prosodic form in French. More specifically, it tests whether phrase-initial accents (LHi) are associated with the left edge of contrastively focused constituents in wh-interrogatives. Since word length has also been correlated w...

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Main Authors: German, James, D'Imperio, Mariapaola
Other Authors: School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/103639
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/19268
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1036392020-03-07T12:10:37Z Information structure and phrase length as predictors of AP-initial accents German, James D'Imperio, Mariapaola School of Humanities and Social Sciences Congrès Mondial de Linguistique Française (2nd : 2010) DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics This study addresses the relationship between information structure and prosodic form in French. More specifically, it tests whether phrase-initial accents (LHi) are associated with the left edge of contrastively focused constituents in wh-interrogatives. Since word length has also been correlated with LHi distribution (Astésano et al. 2007), the study further examines the relative contribution of constraints operating at two distinct levels: information structure and phonological structure. The results show that each set of constraints makes an independent contribution to the occurrence of LHi with no interaction. In other words, phrase-initial accents are more likely to occur on an accentual phrase when its left edge coincides with the left edge of a contrastively focused constituent, and more likely to occur on constituents with more syllables, but constituent length does not limit the extent to which phrase-initial accents mark contrast, or vice versa. By comparison, the distribution of AP phrase boundaries is not correlated with the left edge of contrastively focused constituents. The findings of this study represent the first quantitative description of focus realization in French in a non-corrective context. They establish a previously undocumented link between LHi and discourse-level meaning and have important implications for the possibility of an intermediate level of phrasing in the prosodic hierarchy. Published version 2014-04-29T01:15:14Z 2019-12-06T21:16:52Z 2014-04-29T01:15:14Z 2019-12-06T21:16:52Z 2010 2010 Conference Paper German, J., & D'Imperio, M. (2010). Information structure and phrase length as predictors of AP-initial accents. 2ème Congrès Mondial de Linguistique Française 2010, 088(11). https://hdl.handle.net/10356/103639 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/19268 10.1051/cmlf/2010225 158692 en © 2010 Owned by the authors, published by EDP Sciences. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics
German, James
D'Imperio, Mariapaola
Information structure and phrase length as predictors of AP-initial accents
description This study addresses the relationship between information structure and prosodic form in French. More specifically, it tests whether phrase-initial accents (LHi) are associated with the left edge of contrastively focused constituents in wh-interrogatives. Since word length has also been correlated with LHi distribution (Astésano et al. 2007), the study further examines the relative contribution of constraints operating at two distinct levels: information structure and phonological structure. The results show that each set of constraints makes an independent contribution to the occurrence of LHi with no interaction. In other words, phrase-initial accents are more likely to occur on an accentual phrase when its left edge coincides with the left edge of a contrastively focused constituent, and more likely to occur on constituents with more syllables, but constituent length does not limit the extent to which phrase-initial accents mark contrast, or vice versa. By comparison, the distribution of AP phrase boundaries is not correlated with the left edge of contrastively focused constituents. The findings of this study represent the first quantitative description of focus realization in French in a non-corrective context. They establish a previously undocumented link between LHi and discourse-level meaning and have important implications for the possibility of an intermediate level of phrasing in the prosodic hierarchy.
author2 School of Humanities and Social Sciences
author_facet School of Humanities and Social Sciences
German, James
D'Imperio, Mariapaola
format Conference or Workshop Item
author German, James
D'Imperio, Mariapaola
author_sort German, James
title Information structure and phrase length as predictors of AP-initial accents
title_short Information structure and phrase length as predictors of AP-initial accents
title_full Information structure and phrase length as predictors of AP-initial accents
title_fullStr Information structure and phrase length as predictors of AP-initial accents
title_full_unstemmed Information structure and phrase length as predictors of AP-initial accents
title_sort information structure and phrase length as predictors of ap-initial accents
publishDate 2014
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/103639
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/19268
_version_ 1681034022096994304