We compare the use of prosodic prominence in English and French to convey focus. While previous studies have found these languages, and Germanic vs. Romance more generally, to differ in their use of prominence to encode focus (e.g., Ladd 1990; 1996; 2008; Lambrecht 1994; Cruttenden 1997; 2006), exactly what underlies the difference remains an open question. We investigate two possibilities: The difference between the languages could be due to a difference in their phonology, restricting the circumstances in which material can be prosodically reduced, as proposed in Féry (2014). Alternatively, there could be syntactic, semantic, and/or pragmatic differences concerning when prominence can be used to encode focus. We compare these hypotheses i...
The fact that purely prosodic marking of focus may be weaker in some languages than in others, and...
The present research examines whether adults who learn a second language (L2) mainly in a classroom ...
International audienceWe examined the production and perception of (contrastive) prosodic focus, usi...
We compare the use of prosodic prominence in English and French to convey focus. While previous stud...
Much recent work on German and English intonation has addressed the impact of information structure ...
Much recent work on German and English intonation has addressed the impact of information structure ...
International audienceBackground/Aims. In French, the size of a focus constituent is not reliably ma...
In contrast with stress-accent languages, French does not signal focus through pitch accent assignme...
Though it is widely accepted that French do not signal focus through pitch accent assignment, the re...
Though it is widely accepted that French do not signal focus through pitch accent assignment, the re...
Though it is widely accepted that French do not signal focus through pitch accent assignment, the re...
This paper investigates how French signals prominence in prosody in the post-verbal domain of senten...
The fact that “purely” prosodic marking of focus may be weaker in some languages than in others, and...
The fact that “purely” prosodic marking of focus may be weaker in some languages than in others, and...
The fact that “purely” prosodic marking of focus may be weaker in some languages than in others, and...
The fact that purely prosodic marking of focus may be weaker in some languages than in others, and...
The present research examines whether adults who learn a second language (L2) mainly in a classroom ...
International audienceWe examined the production and perception of (contrastive) prosodic focus, usi...
We compare the use of prosodic prominence in English and French to convey focus. While previous stud...
Much recent work on German and English intonation has addressed the impact of information structure ...
Much recent work on German and English intonation has addressed the impact of information structure ...
International audienceBackground/Aims. In French, the size of a focus constituent is not reliably ma...
In contrast with stress-accent languages, French does not signal focus through pitch accent assignme...
Though it is widely accepted that French do not signal focus through pitch accent assignment, the re...
Though it is widely accepted that French do not signal focus through pitch accent assignment, the re...
Though it is widely accepted that French do not signal focus through pitch accent assignment, the re...
This paper investigates how French signals prominence in prosody in the post-verbal domain of senten...
The fact that “purely” prosodic marking of focus may be weaker in some languages than in others, and...
The fact that “purely” prosodic marking of focus may be weaker in some languages than in others, and...
The fact that “purely” prosodic marking of focus may be weaker in some languages than in others, and...
The fact that purely prosodic marking of focus may be weaker in some languages than in others, and...
The present research examines whether adults who learn a second language (L2) mainly in a classroom ...
International audienceWe examined the production and perception of (contrastive) prosodic focus, usi...