Pointed and plateau-shaped pitch accents in North Frisian

Oliver Niebuhr, Jarich Hoekstra

    Research output: Contribution to journalConference articleResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    Our study presents the initial results of an analysis of North Frisian intonation, based on a spontaneous interview corpus of Fering, the dialect of the island of Föhr off the west coast of the German state of Schleswig-Holstein. The corpus was recorded more than 50 years ago during fieldwork for language documentation and conservation purposes. We selected a small part of this corpus – interviews of 10 elderly speakers – and conducted multiparametric F0 and duration measurements, focusing on nuclear rising-falling pitch accent patterns. We found strong evidence for a phonological pitch-accent distinction that relies on the difference between a pointed and a plateau-shaped F0 peak. We suggest that the two pitch accents be represented as LþH* and H*þL, and we discuss our findings with regard to possible communicative functions, implications for intonational typology, and the trade-off between F0 range and F0 peak extension in conveying pitch height.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalLaboratory Phonology
    Volume6
    Issue number3-4
    Pages (from-to)433-468
    ISSN1868-6346
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2015
    Event14th Conference on Laboratory Phonology: Laboratory Phonology beyond the Laboratory: Quantitative Analyses of Speech Produced outside the Phonetics Laboratory - Tokyo, Japan
    Duration: 25. Jul 201427. Jul 2014

    Conference

    Conference14th Conference on Laboratory Phonology
    Country/TerritoryJapan
    CityTokyo
    Period25/07/201427/07/2014

    Keywords

    • F
    • Fering
    • Intonation
    • North Frisian
    • Peak
    • Pitch accent
    • Plateau

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