Focus, phrase length, and the distribution of phrase-initial rises in French

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

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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: 2015
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107451
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/25513
http://speechprosody2010.illinois.edu/papers/100207.pdf
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1074512019-12-06T22:31:26Z Focus, phrase length, and the distribution of phrase-initial rises in French German, James D'Imperio, Mariapaola School of Humanities and Social Sciences Speech Prosody 2010 DRNTU::Humanities::Language This study addresses the relationship between information structure and intonation in French. More specifically, it tests whether phrase-initial rises (LHi) are associated with the left edge of contrastively focused constituents in wh-interrogatives. Since LHi distribution has also been correlated with length, 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, but with no interaction.In other words, LHi is more likely to occur in longer phrases, though phrase length does not influence the extent to which LHi marks focus. The finding of this study represent the first quantitative assessment of focus realization in French in a non-corrective context, and establish a previously undocumented link between LHi and discourse-level meaning. Accepted version 2015-05-13T01:17:48Z 2019-12-06T22:31:26Z 2015-05-13T01:17:48Z 2019-12-06T22:31:26Z 2010 2010 Conference Paper German, J., & D'Imperio, M. (2010). Focus, phrase length, and the distribution of phrase-initial rises in French. Speech Prosody 2010. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107451 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/25513 http://speechprosody2010.illinois.edu/papers/100207.pdf en © 2010 The Authors. This is the author created version of a work that has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication in Speech Prosody 2010, published by The International Conference on Speech Prosody on behalf of The Authors. It incorporates referee’s comments but changes resulting from the publishing process, such as copyediting, structural formatting, may not be reflected in this document.  The published version is available at: [Article URL: http://speechprosody2010.illinois.edu/papers/100207.pdf]. 4 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities::Language
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::Language
German, James
D'Imperio, Mariapaola
Focus, phrase length, and the distribution of phrase-initial rises in French
description This study addresses the relationship between information structure and intonation in French. More specifically, it tests whether phrase-initial rises (LHi) are associated with the left edge of contrastively focused constituents in wh-interrogatives. Since LHi distribution has also been correlated with length, 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, but with no interaction.In other words, LHi is more likely to occur in longer phrases, though phrase length does not influence the extent to which LHi marks focus. The finding of this study represent the first quantitative assessment of focus realization in French in a non-corrective context, and establish a previously undocumented link between LHi and discourse-level meaning.
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 Focus, phrase length, and the distribution of phrase-initial rises in French
title_short Focus, phrase length, and the distribution of phrase-initial rises in French
title_full Focus, phrase length, and the distribution of phrase-initial rises in French
title_fullStr Focus, phrase length, and the distribution of phrase-initial rises in French
title_full_unstemmed Focus, phrase length, and the distribution of phrase-initial rises in French
title_sort focus, phrase length, and the distribution of phrase-initial rises in french
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107451
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/25513
http://speechprosody2010.illinois.edu/papers/100207.pdf
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