This study examined the production of English intonation by Greek second language (L2) learners of English, specifically their production of polar questions and their pitch range in English. Productions of (a) comparable materials in Greek spoken by the same Greek speakers and (b) English materials spoken by native English speakers were used to assess phonological and phonetic native language (L1) transfer when learning an L2. The results showed that Greek speakers used their L1 (Greek) intonation in English polar questions. Greek speakers’ pitch span in English was narrower from both their L1 (Greek) and from the target (English) pitch span
Native and non-native spoken language is known to show variations regarding pitch patterns and frequ...
This paper deals with the intonation of polar (yes/no) questions in Greek. An experiment was devised...
This study examines pitch range production in the read speech of female German second language (L2) ...
This study examined native language (L1) transfer effects on the production of second-language (L2) ...
The intonation of Modern Greek (MG) is in many ways different to the intonation of English (Ε) (spec...
This study examined the voice onset time (VOT) of Greek and English voiceless stops (/p/, /t/, /k/) ...
Abstract and full text of the articles are freely available on www.degruyter.com (De Gruyter Open)
Abstract This paper examines the intonation of English statements and questions produced by Vietname...
This paper draws attention to the importance and complexity of studying and teaching L2 prosody. To ...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DX192887 / BLDSC - British Library Do...
This study examines the plasticity of native language intonation in English-Austrian German sequenti...
The impact of orthography on the acquisition of L2 phonology: inferring the wrong phonology from pri...
This study investigates the production of the English rhotic by Greek-Cypriot speakers, whose L1 typ...
This paper investigates possible Japanese L1 transfer effects in the area of English intonation. Fir...
Research into non-native speech perception performance suggests that adults encounter difficulties d...
Native and non-native spoken language is known to show variations regarding pitch patterns and frequ...
This paper deals with the intonation of polar (yes/no) questions in Greek. An experiment was devised...
This study examines pitch range production in the read speech of female German second language (L2) ...
This study examined native language (L1) transfer effects on the production of second-language (L2) ...
The intonation of Modern Greek (MG) is in many ways different to the intonation of English (Ε) (spec...
This study examined the voice onset time (VOT) of Greek and English voiceless stops (/p/, /t/, /k/) ...
Abstract and full text of the articles are freely available on www.degruyter.com (De Gruyter Open)
Abstract This paper examines the intonation of English statements and questions produced by Vietname...
This paper draws attention to the importance and complexity of studying and teaching L2 prosody. To ...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DX192887 / BLDSC - British Library Do...
This study examines the plasticity of native language intonation in English-Austrian German sequenti...
The impact of orthography on the acquisition of L2 phonology: inferring the wrong phonology from pri...
This study investigates the production of the English rhotic by Greek-Cypriot speakers, whose L1 typ...
This paper investigates possible Japanese L1 transfer effects in the area of English intonation. Fir...
Research into non-native speech perception performance suggests that adults encounter difficulties d...
Native and non-native spoken language is known to show variations regarding pitch patterns and frequ...
This paper deals with the intonation of polar (yes/no) questions in Greek. An experiment was devised...
This study examines pitch range production in the read speech of female German second language (L2) ...