In:English Prosody in First and Second Language Speakers: A contrastive interlanguage analysis across intonational dimensions
Karin McClellan
[Studies in Corpus Linguistics 120] 2024
► pp. 41–92
Chapter 2L1 and L2 prosody
Published online: 7 November 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.120.c2
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.120.c2
Article outline
- 2.1Models of intonational structure: The autosegmental-metrical vs. the contour-based approach
- 2.2General problem areas of L2 prosody production and research gaps
- 2.3Prosodic features
- 2.4Tones and tunes in declaratives
- 2.4.1Tones and tunes in declaratives in L1 English speech
- 2.4.2Stress patterns and syllables in Czech, English, German, and Spanish
- 2.4.3Tones and tunes in declaratives in Czech, German, and Spanish
- 2.4.4Tones and tunes in declaratives in L2 speech
- 2.5Intonational phrasing
- 2.5.1Intonational phrasing in L1 English speech
- 2.5.2Intonational phrasing in Czech, German, and Spanish
- 2.5.3Intonational phrasing in L2 speech
- 2.6F0 range
- 2.6.1F0 range in L1 English speech
- 2.6.2F0 range in Czech, German, and Spanish
- 2.6.3F0 range in L2 speech
- 2.6.4Prosodic entrainment in L2 discourse
- 2.7Uptalk
- 2.7.1Uptalk in L1 English speech
- 2.7.2Uptalk in Czech, German, and Spanish
- 2.7.3Uptalk in L2 speech
- 2.8Predictions for CLI and other factors
Notes
