This paper deals with the prosodic items «rhythm» and «pauses» in relation with the acquisition of German by Italian natives. It discusses universal as well as language-specific phonetic and phonologic aspects. Starting from the assumption that the basic elements that determine rhythm are syllables in syllable-timed languages and stress groups in stress-timed languages, specific phonetic and phonologic aspects of German and Italian are attributed to rhythmic differences. Pauses are analysed by taking into consideration their function in spoken language, i.e. specifically for speech organization. Both the contrastive aspects of German and Italian and the so-called «foreign accent » of Italian learners of German are discussed. Finally,...
In this work, we address the systemic difference in the prosodic strategies of accentuation at the u...
Italian speakers tend to stress the second component of German morphologically complex words such as...
International audienceIn recent language-rhythm studies (Ramus et al. 1999, Low et al., Grabe & Low ...
This paper deals with the prosodic items \uabrhythm\ubb and \uabpauses\ubb in relation with the acqu...
This paper is concerned with the acquisition of FL/SL German phonetics and prosody in Italy. It move...
This thesis investigates the production and acquisition of prosodic contours in Italian learners of ...
Rhythm is no longer regarded as a language primitive but rather as an emergent property, the product...
Rhythm is no longer regarded as a language primitive but rather as an emergent property, the product...
German and Italian have quite different rhythmic and/or melodic characteristics. This paper investig...
This paper is concerned with the phonetic correlates of main stress in Italian and presents the anal...
In learning a foreign language, the adult learner encounters great difficulties due to the already b...
An extensive comparison of German and Italian intonation still doesn’t exist. This article deals wit...
This paper is focused on the strategies of acquisition of Italian stops in L2 Italian by three Germa...
This paper discusses German intonation and specifically pitch (F0) and pitch contour considering bot...
In learning a foreign language, the adult learner encounters great difficulties due to the already b...
In this work, we address the systemic difference in the prosodic strategies of accentuation at the u...
Italian speakers tend to stress the second component of German morphologically complex words such as...
International audienceIn recent language-rhythm studies (Ramus et al. 1999, Low et al., Grabe & Low ...
This paper deals with the prosodic items \uabrhythm\ubb and \uabpauses\ubb in relation with the acqu...
This paper is concerned with the acquisition of FL/SL German phonetics and prosody in Italy. It move...
This thesis investigates the production and acquisition of prosodic contours in Italian learners of ...
Rhythm is no longer regarded as a language primitive but rather as an emergent property, the product...
Rhythm is no longer regarded as a language primitive but rather as an emergent property, the product...
German and Italian have quite different rhythmic and/or melodic characteristics. This paper investig...
This paper is concerned with the phonetic correlates of main stress in Italian and presents the anal...
In learning a foreign language, the adult learner encounters great difficulties due to the already b...
An extensive comparison of German and Italian intonation still doesn’t exist. This article deals wit...
This paper is focused on the strategies of acquisition of Italian stops in L2 Italian by three Germa...
This paper discusses German intonation and specifically pitch (F0) and pitch contour considering bot...
In learning a foreign language, the adult learner encounters great difficulties due to the already b...
In this work, we address the systemic difference in the prosodic strategies of accentuation at the u...
Italian speakers tend to stress the second component of German morphologically complex words such as...
International audienceIn recent language-rhythm studies (Ramus et al. 1999, Low et al., Grabe & Low ...