As the result of language contact in the northern Tibetan region, one variety of the Mongolic language Monguor (ISO 639-3: MJG) realizes prosodic accent as a rising pitch contour. Furthermore, a small number of homophones have come to be distinguished by tonal contour. Although at least two Turkic and Mongolic languages have occasionally copied the most salient tonal features of some Chinese loanwords, this is the first known example of both distinctive pitch contrasts in native lexemes, as well as default prosodic accent at the utterance level. Such an incipient tonal system offers insight into the relationship between often-contested types of prosodic accent as well as the effects of intensive language contact.Volkswagen Foundation, DOBES...
International audienceThe Bamana (Bambara) tonal system is characterized by two levels with a downdr...
Sino-Tibetan is a prime example of how strongly a language family can typologically diversify under ...
Several studies on the Tibeto-Burman Ngwi (Lolo) language family describe tone behavior in the frame...
As the result of language contact in the northern Tibetan region, one variety of the Mongolic langua...
Yongning Na, also known as Mosuo, is a Sino-Tibetan language spoken in Southwest China. This book pr...
Yongning Na, also known as Mosuo, is a Sino-Tibetan language spoken in Southwest China. This book pr...
Mainland Southeast Asia is often viewed as a linguistic area where five different language phyla – A...
Tone and accent share a key phonetic property, namely pitch prominence. It is therefore not surprisi...
This paper discusses the prosody of Naxi, Yongning Na and Laze, three Sino-Tibetan languages of the ...
This chapter describes tonal features of Halh Mongolian. Mongolian belongs to edge-prominence langua...
The prosodic, and specifically intonation, systems of Tibeto-Burman languages have received less att...
International audienceThe starting-point of this study is the hypothesis (suggested by an overview o...
International audienceThis article focuses on the prosodic organization of Shǐxīng, a tonal Sino-Tib...
International audienceTamang (Bodic division of Tibeto-Burman) is spoken at the edge of the East Asi...
In this paper, we investigate how lexical tones interact with intonation, using data from the Austro...
International audienceThe Bamana (Bambara) tonal system is characterized by two levels with a downdr...
Sino-Tibetan is a prime example of how strongly a language family can typologically diversify under ...
Several studies on the Tibeto-Burman Ngwi (Lolo) language family describe tone behavior in the frame...
As the result of language contact in the northern Tibetan region, one variety of the Mongolic langua...
Yongning Na, also known as Mosuo, is a Sino-Tibetan language spoken in Southwest China. This book pr...
Yongning Na, also known as Mosuo, is a Sino-Tibetan language spoken in Southwest China. This book pr...
Mainland Southeast Asia is often viewed as a linguistic area where five different language phyla – A...
Tone and accent share a key phonetic property, namely pitch prominence. It is therefore not surprisi...
This paper discusses the prosody of Naxi, Yongning Na and Laze, three Sino-Tibetan languages of the ...
This chapter describes tonal features of Halh Mongolian. Mongolian belongs to edge-prominence langua...
The prosodic, and specifically intonation, systems of Tibeto-Burman languages have received less att...
International audienceThe starting-point of this study is the hypothesis (suggested by an overview o...
International audienceThis article focuses on the prosodic organization of Shǐxīng, a tonal Sino-Tib...
International audienceTamang (Bodic division of Tibeto-Burman) is spoken at the edge of the East Asi...
In this paper, we investigate how lexical tones interact with intonation, using data from the Austro...
International audienceThe Bamana (Bambara) tonal system is characterized by two levels with a downdr...
Sino-Tibetan is a prime example of how strongly a language family can typologically diversify under ...
Several studies on the Tibeto-Burman Ngwi (Lolo) language family describe tone behavior in the frame...