Stress, tonal alignment and syllabification in Greek

Authors

  • Anthi Chaida Laboratory of Phonetics & Computational Linguistics, University of Athens, Greece Author
  • Katerina Gioulaki Laboratory of Phonetics & Computational Linguistics, University of Athens, Greece Author
  • Angeliki Logotheti Laboratory of Phonetics & Computational Linguistics, University of Athens, Greece Author
  • Nicolaos Neocleous Laboratory of Phonetics & Computational Linguistics, University of Athens, Greece Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2012/05/0011/000217

Keywords:

Greek, stress, tonal alignment, syllabification, prosody, intonation

Abstract

The present study is an experimental investigation of tonal alignment and syllabification as a function of stress production in Greek. The results of a production experiment show that the onset of the tonal rise alignment of the stressed syllable is within a 0–48 ms region. This tonal alignment is associated with the first intervocalic consonant, unless the phonotactic structure of the syllable on the right is violated. These findings indicate that tonal production structure and tonal alignment are major acoustic correlates of syllabification. On the other hand, the phonotactic structure of the syllable on the right overrides any syllabification on the basis of the open syllable structure, which is predominant in Greek.

 

References

Botinis, A. 1989. *Stress and Prosodic Structure in Greek*. Lund: Lund University Press.

Fourakis, M., Botinis, A. and Katsaiti, M. 1999. Acoustic characteristics of Greek vowels. *Phonetica*, 56(3-4), 172–188.

Gussenhoven, C. 2004. *The Phonology of Tone and Intonation*. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

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Published

01-01-2012

How to Cite

Stress, tonal alignment and syllabification in Greek. (2012). Linguistic Proceedings Series, 5(1), 41-44. https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2012/05/0011/000217

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