Prosody, syntax, macrosyntax

Authors

  • Philippe Martin UFRL Université Paris 7 Denis Diderot, France Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2006/01/0040/000040

Abstract

Most of research work on French intonation has been conducted on prepared speech data (i.e. read speech), with various approaches ranging to purely syntactic (Rossi), Autosegmental-Metrical (Sun and Fougeron) or Phonosyntactic (Martin). This paper examines the bases of the phonosyntactic approach extended to spontaneous (non-prepared) speech data, described syntactically from a macrosyntactic point of view (Blanche-Benveniste, Deulofeu).

 

References

Blanche-Benveniste, C., 2002, Approches de la langue parlée en français, Ophrys, Paris.

Boulakia, G., Deulofeu, J. and Martin, Ph., 2001, Prosodic features finish off ill-formed utterances, don't they?, Proc. Congreso de Fonetica Experimental, Universidad de Sevilla, España, 5-7 mars 2001.

Deulofeu, J., 2003, L’approche macrosyntaxique en syntaxe : un nouveau modèle de rasoir d’Occam contre les notions inutiles, Scolia, n° 16, Publications de l’Université de Strasbourg.

Jun, S-A, and Fougeron, C., 2002. Realizations of Accentual Phrase in French Intonation, Probus 14, 147-172.

Martin, Ph., 1987. Prosodic and Rhythmic Structures in French, Linguistics, 25-5, 925-949.

Martin, Ph., 2004. L’intonation de la phrase dans les langues romanes : l’exception du français, Langue française, mars 2004, 36-55.

Rossi, M. 1999. L’intonation le Système du Français: description et modélisation, Ophrys, Paris.

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Published

01-01-2006

How to Cite

Prosody, syntax, macrosyntax. (2006). Linguistic Proceedings Series, 1(1), 185-188. https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2006/01/0040/000040

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