2019
DOI: 10.1177/0023830919887994
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Uncovering Tonal and Temporal Correlates of Phrasal Prominence in Medʉmba

Abstract: Characterizing prosodic prominence relations in African tone languages is notoriously difficult, as typical acoustic cues to prominence (changes in F0, increases in intensity, etc.) can be difficult to distinguish from those which mark tonal contrasts. The task of establishing prominence is further complicated by the fact that tone, an important cue to syllable prominence and prosodic boundaries cross-linguistically, plays many roles in African languages: tones often signal lexical contrasts, can themselves be… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 64 publications
(85 reference statements)
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“… 1. The question of whether an H tone is prominent is also sometimes discussed for other languages, as in two other articles in this special issue, namely on Medumba (Franich, this issue) and on Taiwanese (Ou & Guo, Language and Speech , this issue). …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“… 1. The question of whether an H tone is prominent is also sometimes discussed for other languages, as in two other articles in this special issue, namely on Medumba (Franich, this issue) and on Taiwanese (Ou & Guo, Language and Speech , this issue). …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet, there might be other sources of influence such as phrasal prominence, which can exist in languages with lexically contrastive tones. For instance, Franich (this issue) provides experimental evidence for a prominence-lending “high phrase edge tone” in Medʉmba (a Grassfields Bantu language), which is functionally distinct from the lexical high tone of the language. There have been phonological analyses that argue for phrasal stress in Mandarin and TSM (e.g., Duanmu, 1995, 2000).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One study is concerned with head prominence and, in particular, looks into typical segmental timing patterns that are usually found in prominent positions accompanying the realization of a pitch accent (Jepson et al, this issue). Two other papers are concerned with edge prominence and tackle the question as to whether the structural attractor of a prosodic edge expresses prominence (Franich, this issue) or not (Destruel & Féry, this issue). Franich tackles the issues of a structurally prominent position within the utterance in a tone language, investigating the prominent role of H tones in the language.…”
Section: Prosodic Prominence In Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In languages in which prosodic phrasing is the only mechanism available for cueing prominence, referred to as edge prominence, both the prosodic phrasing itself, as well as tones associated with phrase edges, contribute towards making constituents stand out (Jun, 2014). One of the papers of this special issue (Franich, this issue) contributes to this line of research, reporting on a H tone in the Bantu tone language, Medumba. This H tone appears in a privileged structural position (demarcating the pre-verbal phonological phrase), but expresses prosodic prominence in a similar way to phrase accents in intonation languages (Grice et al, 2000), where these latter associate with both prosodic boundaries and metrical prominences.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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