Intonation

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INTONATION

Margarita Vinagre Department of English Studies UAM

Lets consider the following example first:


Question: What is the difference in the way the following two sentences sound? A. B. He is going tomorrow. He is going tomorrow?

Answer: The melodies of the two sentences are different:


The melody of sentence A drops at the end, making it a statement. The melody of sentence B rises at the end, making it a question. In languages like English, we call these sentence melodies intonations. All spoken languages have intonations.

What is intonation?
Intonation is a term used to refer to the distinctive use of different patterns of pitch that carry meaningful information.

Pitch is the rate of vibration of the vocal folds. When we speak, normally the pitch of our voice is constantly changing. We describe pitch in terms of high and low.

Show

me

the

money

H 0

L 0.892948

Time (s)

One-syllable utterance:
Two common examples of one-syllable utterances are yes and

no. We have a number of choices for saying these words using different pitch patterns.

The two words can be said with the pitch remaining at a constant
level (level intonation) which is not common, or with the pitch changing from one level to another (moving intonation) which is

more natural. Moving Intonation: Rising intonation means the pitch of the voice increases over time; falling intonation means that the pitch decreases with time.

Syntactic Function
If the same utterance is produced with different intonation, the meaning conveyed will be different. This difference is signaled by intonation patterns.
In English, such different intonation patterns have different syntactic functions. One sentence can be a question, a declarative statement, an expression of surprise, or an expression of doubt. Compare: right? with a rising tone and right. with a falling tone In English, the utterance It is a cat will be regarded as a statement when there is a fall in pitch, and the same utterance will be regarded as a question if the pitch rises.

Suprasegmental phonology

Stress : applied to units larger than phonemes (-> segmental phonology), i.e. syllables Intonation : pitch of voice plays an important part; it is constantly changing during speech; analysing intonation refers to listening to the speakers pitch and recognising what it is doing

Pitch

Defined in terms of high and low (arbitrary choices for end-points of the pitch scale) Auditory sensation experienced by the hearer We are not interested in all aspects of a speakers pitch, but in those that carry some linguistic information Speakers have control over their own pitch of voice, and the possibility of choice (this may have linguistic significance)

Necessary conditions for pitch differences to be linguistically relevant


Being under speakers control Pitch differences must be perceptible (great enough to be heard by a listener as differences in pitch) Significance in linguistics lies in contrasts (a set of items a unit contrasts with)

Form and function of intonation

In the shortest piece of speech single syllable A continuous piece of speech beginning and ending with a pause utterance One syllable utterances like yes and no Even in one syllable words we can either remain at a constant pitch level or change it

Important definitions (Crombie, 1987)


Tonality: "dividing the flow of speech into tone groups or tone units" Tonicity:"locating the syllables on which major movements of pitch occur " Tone: "identifying the direction of pitch movements "

Tone

It is the term used for the overall behaviour of the pitch It can be level or moving The latter is more common Level tone does not sound natural When saying yes or no in a final manner, falling tone is usually used Whereas for questioning rising tone is used (compare yes/no and yes/no?)

Tone and tone languages


Tone

is marked before the syllable: level _yes falling yes rising yes In this way we can also mark the high tone level and low tone level This is not always the case for all languages i.e Chinese, where the tone can determine the meaning of the word in question _ma ma ma http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g2bHdXcszJ4

Speech may be divided into tone units (Tonality). Each tone unit is composed of:
A

tonic syllable (obligatory): the syllable that carries the tone. those The part of a tone unit that extends from the first stressed syllable up to (but not including) the tonic syllable is called the head: give me those Bill called to give me those If there is no stressed syllable before the tonic syllable there cannot be a head: in an hour (prehead)

The

pre-head is composed of all the unstressed syllables in a tone unit preceeding the first stressed syllable. They are found in two main environments: a)When there is no head (i.e. no stressed syllable preceding the tonic syllable): in an hour b)When there is a head, as in the following example: in a little less than an hour pre-head head tonic syllable

Any syllables between the tonic syllable and the end of the tone unit are called the tail: look at it what did you say both of them were here When it is necessary to mark a stress in a tail we use a dot (): what did you say both of them were here

In synthesis:

(pre-head)

(head) tonic syllable (tail)


OR

(PH)

(H)

TS

(T)

Tonicity: locating the syllables on which major movements of pitch occur (tonic syllables)
A tonic syllable is:

The most prominent syllable The anchor point for tone Not necessarily highest pitch

Pitch movement in the tail

tonic syllable: where pitch movement begins tail: syllables after the tonic syllable

-my \hampster likes Britney Spears -my /hampster likes Britney Spears -my vhampster likes Britney Spears

Complex tones and pitch height


Each

of these tones may express particular attitudes:

Fall:

neutral statement Rise: neutral question, doubt Fall-Rise: scepticism Rise-Fall: emphatic statement Level: boredom, disinterest In ordinary speech intonation tends to take place within the lower part of the speakers pitch range. Only with strong feelings we use extra pitch height.

Fall: neutral statement, conclusion

E.g. Have you seen Ann? Yes. (Falling intonation indicates I have answered your question and do not intend to add anything else)

Rise: questioning, doubt, desire to continue conversation

E.g. Have you seen Ann lately? Yes (Rising intonation indicates I want to continue the conversation, I am curious)

Rise-Fall: emphatic statement, irritation, command

Do I really have to clean my room? Yes!

Fall-Rise: surprise, scepticism

Ann and Peter were on good terms at the party? Yes!

Level: boredom, lack of interest

Can you remember Peter Jackson, the cost consultant for our company in Taiwan? The other day in the office I invited him for dinner, hell be coming tomorrow. Yes.

We shall begin by considering the fall: here is a tone unit solely composed of a tonic syllable

Things become more complicated when we add syllables

In this case there are no stressed syllables before the tonic: I said is the pre-head

Here we have added a stressed syllable, told, before the tonic, which is called the head. Notice how the intonation rises from the pre-head

Here we have added syllables after the tonic, this is called the tail. Note how it tends to follow the intonation pattern of the tonic.

This is obviously not the only possible realisation of this sentence. If we put the main stress on told, it changes the pattern completely

In a similar way a rising tonic syllable will condition its tail: here when is the tonic syllable

Again when we come to complex tone we find the tail following the tonic syllable: for a fall-rise the fall occurs on the tonic and the rise at the end of the tail

No matter how many syllables there are in the tail, the rise finishes on the last

While diagrams are immediate and clear, a more practical system of symbols has been developed to denote innotation

Stressed syllables in the head are noted with a vertical tick

I want to go to the dentists.

Stressed syllables in the tail are noted with a dot I want to go to the dentists tomorrow morning

Double vertical lines divide tone units

I want to go to the dentists tomorrow morning Ive got a terrible toothache

Exercises

Divide the following utterances into tone units and decide where the tonic or nucleus might fall in each tone unit: 1. The first student to finish can go early 2. Sadly, Maurice has gone away 3. The person who was watching me left a ticket behind 4. Alan couldn't make it so Ken took his place

Answers
1.

2.
3.

4.

//The first student to finish// can go early// //Sadly// Maurice has gone away// // The person who was watching me //left a ticket behind// //Alan couldn't make it //so Ken took his place//

More exercises

http://www.englishmedialab.com/pronunciatio n/upperintermediate%20intonation%20exercise.htm http://www.tolearnenglish.com/exercises/exerc ise-english-1/exercise-english-674.php http://eolf.univ-fcomte.fr/index.php?page=92

Intonation practice
Intonation 1, 2, 3 & 4. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g2bHdXcszJ4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qh6kUsJcu3k http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k80wiT0t2rc&feat ure=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLGJb63mkyA&f eature=channel Intonation (a bit strong!) http://cornwalltube.com/view.php?video=XfwpgMd WkUE&feature=youtube_gdata&title=Intonation

Practice pitch curves http://www.llas.ac.uk/materialsbank/mb081/pa ge_21.htm

Benjamin Zander, director de la Royal Philarmonic orquesta : http://video.google.es/videoplay?docid=6200291961635473004&hl=es#