The prosodic realization of English question tags (QTs) has received some interest in the literature; yet corpus studies on the factors affecting their phrasing and intonational realization are very rare or limited to a certain aspect. This article presents a quantitative corpus study of 370 QTs from the International Corpus of English that were annotated for prosodic phrasing and intonational realization of the QT and the host. Factors tested were polarity, position in the sentence and the turn as well as verb type. Generally, prosodic phrasing and intonational realization were highly correlated: separate QTs were mostly realized with a falling contour, while integrated QTs were mostly rising. Results from regression models showed a strong...
In many languages, rhetorical questions (RQs) are produced with different prosodic realizations than...
We examine questions in a corpus consisting of excerpts from genuine conversations and interviews re...
Studies of questions present strong evidence that there is no one-to-one relationship between intona...
This large-scale corpus study charts differences between British English and American English as reg...
As first observed by Ladd in 1981, English polar questions with high negation (e.g., Aren't they add...
This article contributes to our knowledge about the prosodic realisation of rhetorical questions (RQ...
In this article we set out to develop a comprehensive description of the speech functions of tag que...
This paper surveys a range of constructions in which prosody affects discourse function and discours...
International audienceWe provide an account of the alignment of linguistic form and discourse functi...
This paper investigates the tag question in context. It will examine the following: 1) the polarity ...
The so-called 'tag' structures of English have received a lot of attention in language teaching prog...
Tags are widely acknowledged as being an important feature of colloquial British English. In this pa...
The vast majority of work on question formation examines interrogatives from the perspective of just...
English sentence prosody provides cues to both focus structure and speaker attitude. Taking the phon...
Pronouns used as tags (It's funny, that), comparable in certain respects to their much more widely s...
In many languages, rhetorical questions (RQs) are produced with different prosodic realizations than...
We examine questions in a corpus consisting of excerpts from genuine conversations and interviews re...
Studies of questions present strong evidence that there is no one-to-one relationship between intona...
This large-scale corpus study charts differences between British English and American English as reg...
As first observed by Ladd in 1981, English polar questions with high negation (e.g., Aren't they add...
This article contributes to our knowledge about the prosodic realisation of rhetorical questions (RQ...
In this article we set out to develop a comprehensive description of the speech functions of tag que...
This paper surveys a range of constructions in which prosody affects discourse function and discours...
International audienceWe provide an account of the alignment of linguistic form and discourse functi...
This paper investigates the tag question in context. It will examine the following: 1) the polarity ...
The so-called 'tag' structures of English have received a lot of attention in language teaching prog...
Tags are widely acknowledged as being an important feature of colloquial British English. In this pa...
The vast majority of work on question formation examines interrogatives from the perspective of just...
English sentence prosody provides cues to both focus structure and speaker attitude. Taking the phon...
Pronouns used as tags (It's funny, that), comparable in certain respects to their much more widely s...
In many languages, rhetorical questions (RQs) are produced with different prosodic realizations than...
We examine questions in a corpus consisting of excerpts from genuine conversations and interviews re...
Studies of questions present strong evidence that there is no one-to-one relationship between intona...