English Intonation English Intonation
1. Introduction
What is intonation?
Prosodic features
Is English a tone language?
The three Ts: tone, tonicity, tonality
The functions of intonation
Intonation in EFL: transfer and interference
2. Tone: going up and going down
Fall, rise, and fall-rise
Falling and rising tones
Falls
Rises
Fall-rises
Statements
The definitive fall
The implicational fall-rise
More about the implicational fall-rise
Declarative questions
Uptalk
Yes, no and ellptical answers
Independent rises
Questions
Wh Questions
Yes-no questions
Tag questions
Independent elliptical questions
Checking
Other sentence types
Exclamations
Commands
Interjections and greetings
Sequences of tones
Leading and trailing tones
Topic and comment
Open and closed lists
Adverbials
Fall plus rise
Tone concord
Tone meanings
Generalized meanings of different tones
Checklist of tone meanings
3. Tonicity: Where does the nucleus go?
Basic principles
On a stressed syllable
On or near last word
Content words and function words
Compounds
Double stress compounds
The old and the new
Information status
Synonyms
Prospective and implied giveness
Focus
Broad and narrow focus
Contrastive focus
Pronouns and demonstratives
Reflexive, reciprocal and indefinite pronouns
Contrastive focus overrides other factors
Contrastive focus on polarity or tense
Dynamic focus
Nucleus on a function word
Narrow focus: yes-no answers and tags
Prepositions
Wh + to be
Other function words that attract the nucleus
Final, but not nuclear
Empty words and pro-forms
Vocatives
Reporting clauses
Adverbs of time and place
Other unfocused adverbs and adverbials
Phrasal verbs
Verb plus adverbial particle
Verb plus prepositional particle
Adverb or preposition
Separated particles
Nucleus on the last noun
Final verbs and adjectives
Events
Accenting old material
Reusing the other speaker's word
Reusing your own words
What is known?
Knowledge: shared, common, and imputed
Difficulty case of tonicity
4. Tonality: Chunking, or division into IPs
Signaling the structure
Choosing the size of the chunk
Chunking the grammar
Vocatives and Imprecations
Adverbials
Heavy noun phrases
Topics
Defining and non-defining
Parellel structures
Tag questions
5. Beyond the three Ts
Prenuclear patterns
The anatomy of the prenuclear part of the IP
Simple heads
Complex heads
Preheads
Finer distinctions of tone
Varieties of fall
Varieties of fall-rise
Varieties of rise
Prenuclear and nuclear tone meaning
Non-nuclear accenting
Lexical stress and downgrading
Two or more lexical stresses
The focus domain
Major and minor focus
Unimportant words at the beginning
Onset on a function word
Further considerations
Sylization
Key
6. Putting it all together
Describing an intonation pattern: the oral examination
Analysing spoken material
Passages for analysis
Last update at: 2023/09/04 09:27:01