We present experimental evidence bearing on Cheng and Rooryck’s (2000) proposal that French wh-in-situ questions are licensed by an intonational morpheme also present in yes-no questions and their claim that such questions are ungrammatical without a rising contour. While most participants produced a rising contour, not all did; when they did, the slope was not as steep as in yes-no questions. Our findings support C&R’s proposal, admitting the central role of information structure. We support a view of question formation in French in which information structure, syntax, and prosody form a tight relationship: the shape of the syntactically-designated contour is affected by pragmatic information. We present a theoretical account appealing to ...
We examine questions in a corpus consisting of excerpts from genuine conversations and interviews re...
This paper addresses the debate on the existence of specifically syntactic restrictions on one of a ...
International audienceIn this paper, we propose a study of the final contours and the prosodic struc...
We present experimental evidence bearing on Cheng & Rooryk's (2000) proposal that wh-in-situ questio...
International audienceThe current experiment addresses the proposal by Cheng and Rooryk (2000) that ...
This article addresses the controversial issue of the prosodic marking of Information Focus in Frenc...
This paper deals with the apparent optionality of French wh-in-situ. I present the theoretical propo...
International audienceIn the south of France, the French language has developed in contact with Occi...
The aim of this paper is to corroborate the assumption of syntactic optio-nality for French wh-quest...
As opposed to English, French wh-questions can take a wide variety of forms. I identify four basic p...
This article addresses the question of wh- questions French and the link betweensyntax and pragmatic...
French information-seeking questions are unusual in that the wh-word (question word) may appear in t...
The aim of this paper is to corroborate the assumption of syntactic optionality for French wh-questi...
Abstract: This article examines French wh-in-situ. We argue that wh-in-situ in French is licensed by...
International audienceLinguistic studies of the intonation of Yes-No questions in French show that, ...
We examine questions in a corpus consisting of excerpts from genuine conversations and interviews re...
This paper addresses the debate on the existence of specifically syntactic restrictions on one of a ...
International audienceIn this paper, we propose a study of the final contours and the prosodic struc...
We present experimental evidence bearing on Cheng & Rooryk's (2000) proposal that wh-in-situ questio...
International audienceThe current experiment addresses the proposal by Cheng and Rooryk (2000) that ...
This article addresses the controversial issue of the prosodic marking of Information Focus in Frenc...
This paper deals with the apparent optionality of French wh-in-situ. I present the theoretical propo...
International audienceIn the south of France, the French language has developed in contact with Occi...
The aim of this paper is to corroborate the assumption of syntactic optio-nality for French wh-quest...
As opposed to English, French wh-questions can take a wide variety of forms. I identify four basic p...
This article addresses the question of wh- questions French and the link betweensyntax and pragmatic...
French information-seeking questions are unusual in that the wh-word (question word) may appear in t...
The aim of this paper is to corroborate the assumption of syntactic optionality for French wh-questi...
Abstract: This article examines French wh-in-situ. We argue that wh-in-situ in French is licensed by...
International audienceLinguistic studies of the intonation of Yes-No questions in French show that, ...
We examine questions in a corpus consisting of excerpts from genuine conversations and interviews re...
This paper addresses the debate on the existence of specifically syntactic restrictions on one of a ...
International audienceIn this paper, we propose a study of the final contours and the prosodic struc...