Prosodic typology : the phonology of intonation and phrasing
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Prosodic typology : the phonology of intonation and phrasing
Oxford University Press, 2005-
- [1]
- 2
Available at / 45 libraries
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Tokyo University of Foreign Studies Library
付属CD-ROMK/811/608768/D0000260435,
K/811/6087680000608768 -
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Note
[1] includes CD-ROM
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book illustrates an approach to prosodic typology through descriptions of the intonation and the prosodic structure of thirteen typologically different languages based on the same theoretical framework, the 'autosegmental-metrical' model of intonational phonology, and the transcription system of prosody known as Tones and Break Indices (ToBI). It is the first book introducing the history and principles of this system and it covers European languages, Asian languages, an Australian aboriginal language, and an American Indian language. The book shows how languages and dialects are similar to or different from other languages or dialect varieties in terms of the prosodic structure, the intonational categories, and their realizations. This is the first book on intonation, which is accompanied by a CD-ROM where sound files mentioned in each chapter are stored.
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The original ToBI system and the evolution of the ToBI framework
- 3. German intonation in autosegmental-metrical phonology
- 4. Intonational analysis and prosodic annotation of Greek spoken corpora
- 5. Transcription of Dutch intonation
- 6. Transcribing Serbo-Croatian intonation
- 7. The J ToBI model of Japanese intonation
- 8. Korean intonational phonology and prosodic transcription
- 9. Towards a Pan-Mandarin system for prosodic transcription
- 10. An autosegmental-metrical analysis and prosodic annotation conventions for Cantonese
- 11. Intonational phonology of Chickasaw
- 12. Intonation in six dialects of Bininj Gun-wok
- 13. Strategies for intonation labelling across varieties of Italian
- 14. Intonational variation in four dialects of English: the high rising tune
- 15. Intonational prominence in varieties of Swedish revisited
- 16. Prosodic typology
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