On final rises and fall-rises in German and Swedish
(2008) FONETIK 2008 p.81-84- Abstract
- This study explores the intonational signalling of a ‘request address’ in German and Swedish. Data from 16 speakers (9 Germans, 7 Swedes) were elicited under controlled conditions, and intonation contours produced on the test phrase “Wallander?” were classified according to
their phrase-final pattern. Both ‘rises’ and ‘fall-rises’ were produced frequently by both Germans and Swedes, which is in line with Ohala’s frequency code, but challenging for the Lund model of Swedish intonation.
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1214089
- author
- Ambrazaitis, Gilbert LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2008
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- intonation, prosody, frequency code, Lund model, nuclear tone
- host publication
- Proceedings FONETIK 2008
- editor
- Eriksson, Anders and Lindh, Jonas
- pages
- 4 pages
- publisher
- Department of Linguistics, Gothenburg University
- conference name
- FONETIK 2008
- conference location
- Gothenburg, Sweden
- conference dates
- 2008-06-11 - 2008-06-13
- ISBN
- 978-91-977196-0-5
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- additional info
- The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: Linguistics and Phonetics (015010003)
- id
- ece74178-6e1d-4666-b53b-c90d1e0feed6 (old id 1214089)
- alternative location
- http://www.ling.gu.se/konferenser/fonetik2008/papers/Proc_fonetik_2008.pdf
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 10:55:18
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:01:35
@inproceedings{ece74178-6e1d-4666-b53b-c90d1e0feed6, abstract = {{This study explores the intonational signalling of a ‘request address’ in German and Swedish. Data from 16 speakers (9 Germans, 7 Swedes) were elicited under controlled conditions, and intonation contours produced on the test phrase “Wallander?” were classified according to<br/><br> their phrase-final pattern. Both ‘rises’ and ‘fall-rises’ were produced frequently by both Germans and Swedes, which is in line with Ohala’s frequency code, but challenging for the Lund model of Swedish intonation.}}, author = {{Ambrazaitis, Gilbert}}, booktitle = {{Proceedings FONETIK 2008}}, editor = {{Eriksson, Anders and Lindh, Jonas}}, isbn = {{978-91-977196-0-5}}, keywords = {{intonation; prosody; frequency code; Lund model; nuclear tone}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{81--84}}, publisher = {{Department of Linguistics, Gothenburg University}}, title = {{On final rises and fall-rises in German and Swedish}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/5652832/1214099.pdf}}, year = {{2008}}, }