The structure imposed upon spoken sentences by intonation seems frequently to be orthogonal to their traditional surface-syntactic structure. However, the notion of intonational structure as formulated by Pierrehumbert, Selkirk, and others, can be subsumed under a rather different notion of syntactic surface structure that emerges from a theory of grammar based on a Combinatory extension to Categorial Grammar. Interpretations of constituents at this level are in turn directly related to information structures , or discourse-related notions of theme , rheme , focus and presupposition . Some simplifications appear to follow for the problem of integrating syntax and other high-level modules in spoken language systems