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Intonation Patterns in Tyrolean German

An Autosegmental-Metrical Analysis

by Geoffrey Barker (Author)
©2005 Monographs XVIII, 182 Pages

Summary

Intonation is increasingly becoming a central topic in understanding the phonology of spoken language. Geoffrey Barker gives a detailed account of the intonational structure of Tyrolean German, a South Bavarian dialect of German spoken in western Austria and northern Italy, using an «autosegmental-metrical» theory of intonational phonology. Based on new fieldwork data, he provides a phonetic and phonological analysis of pitch contours in Tyrolean German with the assistance of speech analysis software. He demonstrates that Tyrolean German intonation is fundamentally different from the intonation of non-southern varieties of Standard German due to its distinctive default pitch accent. This book will appeal to both intonologists and dialectologists with its illuminating depiction of the prosodic structure of this southern dialect of German. The accompanying CD enhances the reader’s experience with speech samples corresponding to the appropriate figures in the book.

Details

Pages
XVIII, 182
Year
2005
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820468372
Language
English
Keywords
Tirolisch Intonation (Linguistik) Autosegmentale Phonologie
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2005. XVIII, 182 pp., num. tables and graphs, 1 CD

Biographical notes

Geoffrey Barker (Author)

The Author: Geoffrey Barker received his Ph.D. in Germanic linguistics from the University of California at Berkeley, where he is currently serving as Lecturer. His research interests and publications span the fields of intonation, prosody, phonology, phonetics, German dialectology, sociolinguistics, and historical Germanic linguistics.

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Title: Intonation Patterns in Tyrolean German