The hypothesis was tested that the timing of accent-lending pitch movements influences the perceived duration of a vowel. Dutch subjects were asked to adjust the physical duration of a vowel so as to fit into the temporal structure of a sentence. The vowel occurred in a monosyllabic word embedded in a carrier sentence. Three pitch movements on the vowel were used, a rise, a rise-fall, and a fall. Two opposite trends were found: the earlier the fall, the longer the duration of the target vowel was adjusted, the earlier the rise or rise-fall, the shorter its duration was adjusted. Control experiments indicated that the results should be interpreted in terms of a trade-off between the effects on prominence of timing of pitch movements and phys...