On the timing of the final rise in Dutch falling–rising intonation contours

A corpus of Dutch falling–rising intonation contours with early nuclear accent was elicited from nine speakers with a view to establishing the extent to which the low F0 target immediately preceding the final rise, was attracted by a post-nuclear stressed syllable (PNS) in either of the last two wor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of phonetics 2011-04, Vol.39 (2), p.225-236
Hauptverfasser: van de Ven, Marco, Gussenhoven, Carlos
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A corpus of Dutch falling–rising intonation contours with early nuclear accent was elicited from nine speakers with a view to establishing the extent to which the low F0 target immediately preceding the final rise, was attracted by a post-nuclear stressed syllable (PNS) in either of the last two words or by Second Occurrence Contrastive Focus (SOCF) on either of these words. We found a small effect of foot type, which we interpret as due to a rhythmic 'trochaic enhancement' effect. The results show that neither PNS nor SOCF influences the location of the low F0 target, which appears consistently to be timed with reference to the utterance end. It is speculated that there are two ways in which postnuclear tones can be timed. The first is by means of a phonological association with a post-nuclear stressed syllable, as in Athenian Greek and Roermond Dutch. The second is by a fixed distance from the utterance end or from the target of an adjacent tone. Accordingly, two phonological mechanisms are defended, association and edge alignment, such that all tones edge-align, but only some associate. Specifically, no evidence was found for a third situation that can be envisaged, in which a post-nuclear tone is gradiently attracted to a post-nuclear stress. ► A study of Dutch falling–rising intonation contours with 9 speakers. ► Phrase-final F0 rise is timed to occur at phrase end. ► No evidence for alignment with or attraction to stressed syllable in Dutch intonation. ► Pitch alignment insensitive to Second Occurrence Focus in Dutch. ► Trochaic Enhancement may shorten weak syllable in repeated trochee.
ISSN:0095-4470
1095-8576
DOI:10.1016/j.wocn.2011.01.006