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English Prosody in First and Second Language Speakers
A contrastive interlanguage analysis across intonational dimensions
Discover the intricate dynamics of L2 prosody with this pioneering study, which examines how advanced learners from Czech, German, and Spanish backgrounds engage with British and American English intonation. By employing a multidimensional approach - spanning phonetic, phonological, discourse-pragmatic, and sociolinguistic perspectives - this book provides a comprehensive overview of L2 prosodic features, highlighting patterns of intonational phrasing, f0 range, and the use of tones and uptalk. Building on foundational works by Pierrehumbert, Mennen, and Gut, this work bridges significant gaps in the field by comparing different L1 and L2 varieties, integrating diverse linguistic variables, and proposing a multifactorial model of L2 prosody. Relevant for linguists, language educators, and researchers in SLA, the findings offer valuable insights for reducing foreign accents and enhancing intelligibility, making it an essential resource for improving language teaching methodologies and learner outcomes. Dive into this essential guide and elevate your understanding of L2 prosody and its impact on effective communication.
[Studies in Corpus Linguistics, 120] 2024. xix, 296 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 25 October 2024
Published online on 25 October 2024
© John Benjamins
Table of Contents
- List of tables | pp. ix–xi
- List of figures | pp. xi–xiv
- List of abbreviations and acronyms | pp. xv–xviii
- List of prosodic symbols and diacritics (Tone and Break Indices (ToBI)) | pp. xix–19
- Chapter 1. English prosody: An overview | pp. 1–40
- Chapter 2. L1 and L2 prosody | pp. 41–92
- Chapter 3. Corpus data and methodology | pp. 93–128
- Chapter 4. Prosodic features across varieties of English | pp. 129–194
- Chapter 5. Discussion of the results | pp. 195–238
- References | pp. 239–292
- Index | pp. 293–295
- Corpus index | p. 296
Cited by (2)
Cited by two other publications
Mugirase, Gloriose, Speciose N. Ndimurugero, Celestin Ndikumana, Jean Claude Akimana, Ildephonse Kereni & Jean Baptiste Sesonga
McClellan, Karin, Kathrin Kircili & Sandra Götz
2024. Syntactic segmentation of spoken corpus data. In Crossing Boundaries through Corpora [Studies in Corpus Linguistics, 119], ► pp. 154 ff.
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