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Kaji, Shigeki – Language Sciences, 2009
This paper explores the interaction of tone and syntax in Rutooro, a Bantu language of Western Uganda. Rutooro has lost its lexical tone but retains a phrasally defined high pitch that appears on the penultimate syllable--the default position in Bantu. This high pitch can work grammatically and in fact distinguishes between the noun phrase vs.…
Descriptors: African Languages, Syllables, Nouns, Syntax
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Hualde, Jose Ignacio – Language Sciences, 2009
In this paper, I examine the prosodic nature of unstressed function words in Spanish. I defend the hypothesis that these words, like all other words in the language, have a syllable that is lexically designated as stressed. I suggest that the essential property of these words is that they are subject to a rule of prosodic merger with following…
Descriptors: Morphemes, Phonology, Spanish, Syllables
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Duchan, Judith; Oliva, Joseph – Language Sciences, 1979
Reports on a study which explored the intonational differences between constant plus variable utterances and variable plus variable utterances, and which sought to use intonation to resolve the lexical additive vs syntactic representation of beginning productions. (AM)
Descriptors: Child Language, Intonation, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns