The aim of this paper is to shed new light on the tonal grammar of Icelandic and to complement the tone inventory as previously described in the literature (Arnason 1998). Specifically, types of pitch accents and edge tones and their combinations in neutral declaratives and questions, and in utterances containing narrow focus are addressed. Two pitch accent types (H∗ and L∗ ) and two edge tones (H- and L-) are identified, for which evidence has not been found in previous research. Moreover, the paper shows for declaratives, that along with downstep, Icelandic has upstep across Intonational Phrases. Upstep applies to a series of pitch peaks. It may occur in neutral declaratives and in utterances with final narrow focus. Overall, the results of ...
This chapter presents the results of a production study with twelve speakers of South Swedish. The r...
In this paper we outline the Icelandic research plans in the Scandinavian Dialect Syntax project and...
This paper discusses topicality in Icelandic grammar as realized in several phenomena: referential t...
We investigate the intonation of information-seeking and rhetorical questions in Icelandic. The resu...
Two production studies and one perception study were designed to systematically test F0 alignment an...
Two experiments were designed to test F0 alignment in Icelandic pitch accents with a view to establi...
The lexical accents of one dialect of East Norwe-gian were examined using a parametric intonation mo...
The aim of this paper is to present a suitable framework for the description of intonational variati...
Accent 1 is very much accepted in the literature as the default tonal marker in Scandinavian languag...
This study investigates whether Urban East Norwegian (hence force Norwegian) speakers realize their ...
A considerable amount of evidence from several intonation languages (e.g., German, English, Italian)...
The present paper is a list of modern Icelandic verbs and pronouns analysed into their respective st...
The vowel system of Modern Icelandic, unlike that of Old Icelandic, continues to spawn different int...
Modern Icelandic generative phonology contains devoicing rules responsible for the partially devoice...
A considerable amount of evidence from several intonation languages (e.g., German, English, Italian)...
This chapter presents the results of a production study with twelve speakers of South Swedish. The r...
In this paper we outline the Icelandic research plans in the Scandinavian Dialect Syntax project and...
This paper discusses topicality in Icelandic grammar as realized in several phenomena: referential t...
We investigate the intonation of information-seeking and rhetorical questions in Icelandic. The resu...
Two production studies and one perception study were designed to systematically test F0 alignment an...
Two experiments were designed to test F0 alignment in Icelandic pitch accents with a view to establi...
The lexical accents of one dialect of East Norwe-gian were examined using a parametric intonation mo...
The aim of this paper is to present a suitable framework for the description of intonational variati...
Accent 1 is very much accepted in the literature as the default tonal marker in Scandinavian languag...
This study investigates whether Urban East Norwegian (hence force Norwegian) speakers realize their ...
A considerable amount of evidence from several intonation languages (e.g., German, English, Italian)...
The present paper is a list of modern Icelandic verbs and pronouns analysed into their respective st...
The vowel system of Modern Icelandic, unlike that of Old Icelandic, continues to spawn different int...
Modern Icelandic generative phonology contains devoicing rules responsible for the partially devoice...
A considerable amount of evidence from several intonation languages (e.g., German, English, Italian)...
This chapter presents the results of a production study with twelve speakers of South Swedish. The r...
In this paper we outline the Icelandic research plans in the Scandinavian Dialect Syntax project and...
This paper discusses topicality in Icelandic grammar as realized in several phenomena: referential t...