DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Hits 1 – 14 of 14

1
The Cretan fall: an analysis of the declarative intonation melody in the Cretan dialect ...
BALTAZANI, MARY; KAINADA, EVIA. - : Modern Greek Dialects and Linguistics Theory, 2019
BASE
Show details
2
Vowel raising, deletion and diphthongization in Kozani Greek ...
Lengeris, Angelos; Kainada, Evia; Topintzi, Nina. - : Modern Greek Dialects and Linguistics Theory, 2016
BASE
Show details
3
Vocoid-driven processes: Palatalization and glide hardening in Greek and its dialects
In: Glossa: a journal of general linguistics; Vol 1, No 1 (2016); 23 ; 2397-1835 (2016)
BASE
Show details
4
Vowel raising, deletion and diphthongization in Kozani Greek
BASE
Show details
5
The prenuclear field matters: Questions and statements in standard modern Greek
Nicolaidis, Katerina; Baltazani, Mary; Lengeris, Angelos. - : International Phonetic Association, 2015
BASE
Show details
6
Dialectal effects on the perception of Greek vowels
Kainada, Evia; Lengeris, Angelos; Iverson, Paul. - : International Phonetic Association, 2015
BASE
Show details
7
Native Language Influences on the Production of Second-language Prosody
BASE
Show details
8
The Acquisition of English Intonation by Native Greek Speakers ...
Kainada, Evia; Lengeris, Angelos. - : Selected papers on theoretical and applied linguistics, 2014
BASE
Show details
9
The Acquisition of English Intonation by Native Greek Speakers
Kainada, Evia; Lengeris, Angelos. - : DE GRUYTER, 2014
BASE
Show details
10
Recording speech articulation in dialogue: evaluating a synchronized double electromagnetic articulography setup
In: Journal of phonetics. - Amsterdam : Elsevier 41 (2013) 6, 421-431
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
Show details
11
Recording speech articulation in dialogue: Evaluating a synchronized double Electromagnetic Articulography setup
BASE
Show details
12
Evaluating methods for eliciting dialectal speech ...
Kainada, Evia; Baltazani, Mary. - : Modern Greek Dialects and Linguistics Theory, 2012
BASE
Show details
13
Phonetic and phonological nature of prosodic boundaries: evidence from Modern Greek
Kainada, Evia. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2010
Abstract: Research on prosodic structure, the underlying structure organising the prosodic grouping of spoken utterances, has shown that it consists of hierarchically organised prosodic constituents. The present thesis explores the nature of this constituency, in particular the question of whether prosodic structure is comprised of a given set of qualitatively distinct domains, or of a set of domains of the same type varying only gradiently in "strength", or a possible mixture of both types of relations across prosodic levels. This question is addressed by testing how prosodic constituency (mirrored on boundary strength manipulations) is signalled acoustically via pre- and post-boundary durations, intonation contours, and two sandhi processes, namely vowel hiatus resolution and post-nasal stop voicing in Modern Greek. Results show that the phonetic signalling of boundary strength provides support for a mixture of both differences of type and strength across prosodic levels, with some levels only differing in terms of their strength. Pre-boundary durations and resolution of vowel hiatus are gradiently affected by boundary strength with shorter to longer durations from lower to higher domains, and less instances of vowel deletion higher in the hierarchy. Post-nasal stop voicing is qualitatively affected by boundary strength with almost all voicing instances occurring in the lowest constituent of the structure in the way a qualitative view of prosodic constituency would predict, and in line with research on prosodic phonology. Finally, both the alignment and scaling of intonation contours at the edges of domains is found to distinguish qualitatively the lowest domain from the higher ones. All higher phrasal domains align with respect to the boundary and their peak scaling varies consistently gradiently across speakers. When combining those two findings, support is provided for the existence of differences of strength and type within the same process. Taken together the results from these four phenomena support the postulation of an underlying prosodic structure with a limited number of qualitatively distinct domains, within which at the same time some type of recursivity or structured variability must be allowed for. It is shown that there are structural properties of speech, like the length of the utterance, influencing the organisation of utterances in a principled gradient manner, supporting the existence of differences of strength within domain types. These findings bear significance for theories of prosodic structure that have assumed either the view of solely qualitative differences, or sole boundary strength differences, as well as for future proposals on prosodic constituency. Finally, the use of Modern Greek in this thesis adds to the existing literature on a language that has been extensively used by researchers working in views supporting the existence of qualitative distinctions of type across prosodic domains, and provides the first in depth experimental analysis of post-nasal stop voicing.
Keyword: intonation; lengthening; Modern Greek; post-nasal stop voicing; prosodic hierarchy; vowel hiatus
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1842/4469
BASE
Hide details
14
The Interaction of cues to phrasing and cues to lexical stress in Greek
Kainada, Evia. - 2005
BASE
Show details

Catalogues
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
Bibliographies
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
0
0
0
0
Open access documents
13
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern