Difference between revisions of "Pitch accent (lexical)"

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(New page: '''Pitch accent''' refers to a kind of word-prosodic prominence of syllables in some languages (such as Japanese) where pitch change is the only cue to accent (in contrast ...)
 
 
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===Polysemy===
 
===Polysemy===
 
''Pitch accent'' can also refer to a building block of an [[intonation contour]]; see [[pitch accent (intonational)]].
 
''Pitch accent'' can also refer to a building block of an [[intonation contour]]; see [[pitch accent (intonational)]].
**"...the term ''pitch accent'' has two distinct meanings. In one sense, it refers to the lexically specified pitch features of languages like Japanese, some Bantu languages, and some European languages including Swedish, Norwegian, and Serbo-Croatian. In the other sense...it refers to a pitch feature (normally a localised pitch movement) associated with a prominent syllable: in this sense pitch accent is simultaneously a building-block of an intonation contour and an important cue to the prominence of the syllable with which it is associated." (Ladd 1996:286)
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:::*''"...the term ''pitch accent'' has two distinct meanings. In one sense, it refers to the lexically specified pitch features of languages like Japanese, some Bantu languages, and some European languages including Swedish, Norwegian, and Serbo-Croatian. In the other sense...it refers to a pitch feature (normally a localised pitch movement) associated with a prominent syllable: in this sense pitch accent is simultaneously a building-block of an intonation contour and an important cue to the prominence of the syllable with which it is associated."'' (Ladd 1996:286)
  
 
===Synonyms===
 
===Synonyms===
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[[Category:Phonetics and phonology]]
 
[[Category:Suprasegmental feature]]
 
[[Category:Suprasegmental feature]]

Latest revision as of 11:14, 9 September 2007

Pitch accent refers to a kind of word-prosodic prominence of syllables in some languages (such as Japanese) where pitch change is the only cue to accent (in contrast to stress, where amplitude and duration are also important cues).

Polysemy

Pitch accent can also refer to a building block of an intonation contour; see pitch accent (intonational).

  • "...the term pitch accent has two distinct meanings. In one sense, it refers to the lexically specified pitch features of languages like Japanese, some Bantu languages, and some European languages including Swedish, Norwegian, and Serbo-Croatian. In the other sense...it refers to a pitch feature (normally a localised pitch movement) associated with a prominent syllable: in this sense pitch accent is simultaneously a building-block of an intonation contour and an important cue to the prominence of the syllable with which it is associated." (Ladd 1996:286)

Synonyms

Reference

  • Ladd, D. Robert. 1996. Intonational phonology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.