Language, Band 54,Ausgaben 3-4Linguistic Society of America, 1978 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 24
Seite 524
... stylized intonation and calling is incidental . Calls can occur with and without stylized intonation ; and more importantly , stylized intonation can occur at calling volumes and at normal conversational levels . Actually , ' secondary ...
... stylized intonation and calling is incidental . Calls can occur with and without stylized intonation ; and more importantly , stylized intonation can occur at calling volumes and at normal conversational levels . Actually , ' secondary ...
Seite 525
... stylized or not [ level pitch sequence or falling pitch ] , but if they are stylized they can be stylized a little [ normal conversational voice ] or a lot [ vocative chant ] . Level pitch is the distinctive feature , as it were , of ...
... stylized or not [ level pitch sequence or falling pitch ] , but if they are stylized they can be stylized a little [ normal conversational voice ] or a lot [ vocative chant ] . Level pitch is the distinctive feature , as it were , of ...
Seite 535
... stylized intonation contours , characterized by relatively level final pitch , which are related to other ' plain ' contours characterized by rising or falling final pitch . The semantic facts show clearly that the stylized contours are ...
... stylized intonation contours , characterized by relatively level final pitch , which are related to other ' plain ' contours characterized by rising or falling final pitch . The semantic facts show clearly that the stylized contours are ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American analysis appear apply approach basic called chapter claim clause color comparative complex concerned conditionals consider constructions contains contrast defined definition derived described dialect discussion distinction English evidence example existence expressions fact FIGURE final formal function fuzzy gerund given gives grammar important indicate interesting intonation involved language Latin lexical linguistic marked meaning membership MICHIGAN natural noted noun object observed occur original person phonetic phonological plural position possible predicate present Press problem produced question reading reference relative represent response rules seems semantic sense sentences situation social sound speakers specific speech stress structure stylized suffixation suggests syllable syntax theory tion tone topics University utterance verbs volume vowel