Prosody is generally studied at a separate linguistic level from syntax and semantics. It analyses phonetic properties of utterances such as pitch and prominence, and orders them into phonological categories such as pitch accent, boundary tone, and metrical grid. The goal is to define distinctive formal differentiators of meanings in utterances. But what these meanings are is either excluded or a secondary concern. This book takes the opposite approach, asking what are the basic categories of meaning that speakers want to transmit to listeners? And what formal means do they use to achieve it? It places linguistic form in functions of speech communication, and takes into account all the formal exponents - sounds, words, syntax, prosodies - for specific functional coding. Basic communicative functions such as 'questioning' may be universally assumed, but their coding by linguistic bundles varies between languages. A comparison of function-form systems in English, German and Mandarin Chinese shows this formal diversity for universal functions.
Klaus J. Kohler Book order




- 2022
- 2012
Bridging the segment-prosody divide in speech production and perception
- 108 pages
- 4 hours of reading
Phonetic expression is generally divided into sounds and prosodies. This collection of articles focuses on the interrelation of the two domains. Descriptive and experimental techniques are applied in speech production and perception to analyze sounds in different prosodic patterns, and prosodic patterns across different sounds at the levels of intonation, tone, emphatic intensification, lexical stress and foreign-accented speech. One of the striking results is that German fricatives /f/, /s/, /?/, /x/ are produced with higher-spectral energy distribution in high-rising than in falling f0 contours, and that the same fricative types in the two different prosodies sound high- versus low-pitched, and thus heighten the perception of the rising or falling intonation. The publication will be basic reading for anybody interested in bridging the separation into segments and prosodies, thus acquiring a more complete picture of human speech: phoneticians, linguists, applied linguists, psycholinguists, psychologists, speech-technologists as well as foreign-language teachers.