Part of
Intonational Grammar in Ibero-Romance: Approaches across linguistic subfields
Edited by Meghan E. Armstrong, Nicholas Henriksen and Maria del Mar Vanrell
[Issues in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics 6] 2016
► pp. viixii
References
Armstrong, M.E., & Prieto, P
(2015) The contribution of context and contour to perceived belief in polar questions. Journal of Pragmatics, 81, 77-92. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Arvaniti, A., & Ladd, D.R
(2009) Greek wh- questions and the phonology of intonation. Phonology, 26, 43-74. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Arvaniti, A., Ladd, D.R., & Mennen, I
(1998) Stability of tonal alignment: The case of Greek prenuclear accents. Journal of Phonetics, 26, 3-25. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2000) What is a starred tone? In J. Pierrehumbert, & M. Broe (Eds.), Papers in Laboratory Phonology V (pp. 119-131). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Beckman, M., Díaz-Campos, M., McGory, J.T, & Morgan, T.A
(2002) Intonation across Spanish, in the Tones and Break Indices framework. Probus, 14, 9-36. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Dachkovsky, S., & Sandler, W
(2010) Visual intonation in the prosody of a sign language. Language and Speech, 52(2/3), 287-314. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Dachkovsky, S., Healy C., & Sandler, W
2013Visual intonation in two sign languages. Phonology, 30(2), 211-252. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Diehl, J.J., & Paul, R
(2013) Acoustic and perceptual measurements of prosody production on the PEPS-C by children with autism. Applied Psycholinguistics, 34, 135-161 DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Estebas-Vilaplana, E., Prieto, P
(2008) La notación prosódica en español. Una revisión del Sp_ToBI. Estudios de Fonética Experimental, XVII, 263-283.Google Scholar
Frota, S
(2014) The intonational phonology of European Portuguese. In S.-A. Jun (Ed.) Prosodic typology 2. The phonology of intonation and phrasing (pp. 6-42). Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Frota, S., Cruz, M., Svartman, F., Vigário, M., Collischon, G., Fonseca, A., & Serra, C
(2015) Intonational variation in Portuguese: European and Brazilian varieties. In S. Frota, & P. Prieto (Eds.), Intonational variation in Romance (pp. 235-283). Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Goldsmith, J.A
(1979) Autosegmental phonology. New York, NY: Garland.Google Scholar
Gunlogson, C
(2003) True to form: Rising and falling declaratives as questions in English. New York, NY: Routledge.Google Scholar
Gussenhoven, C
(2004) The phonology of tone and intonation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gutiérrez-Bravo, R
(2002) Focus, word order, variation, and intonation in Spanish and English. In C. Wiltshire, & Camps, J. (Eds.), Romance phonology and variation (pp. 39-53). Amsterdam: John Benjamins. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Henriksen, N., Geeslin, K.L., & Willis, E
(2010) The Development of L2 Spanish intonation during a study abroad immersion program in León, Spain: Global contours and final boundary movements. Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics, 3(1), 113-162. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Hualde, J.I., & Schwegler, A
(2008) Intonation in Palenquero. Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages, 23(1), 1-31. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Ladd, D.R
(2008) Intonational Phonology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
McCann, J., Peppé, S., Gibbon, F., O’Hare, A., & Rutherford, M
(2007) Prosody and its relationship to language in school-aged children with high-functioning autism. International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 42(6), 682-702. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Mennen, I
(2004) Bi-directional interference in the intonation of Dutch speakers of Greek. Journal of Phonetics, 32, 543-563. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Nespor, M., & Sandler, W
(1999) Prosodic Phonology in Israeli Sign Language. Language and Speech, 42(2/3), 143-176. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Pierrehumbert, J.B
(1980) The phonetics and phonology of English intonation. New York, NY: Garland.Google Scholar
Pierrehumbert, J.B., & Beckman, M.E
(1988) Japanese tone structure. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.Google Scholar
Pierrehumbert, J.B., & Clopper, C.G
(2010) What is LabPhon? And where is it going? Laboratory Phonology, 10, 113-132.Google Scholar
Plesa Skwerer, D., Schofield, C., Verbalis, A., Faja, S., & Tager-Flusberg, H
(2007) Receptive prosody in adolescents and adults with Williams Syndrome. Language and Cognitive Processes, 22(2), 247-271. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Prieto, P
(2014) The intonational phonology of Catalan. In S.-A. Jun (Ed.) Prosodic typology 2. The phonology of intonation and phrasing (pp. 43-80). Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Prieto, P., & Roseano, P
(Eds) (2010) Transcription of intonation of the Spanish language. Munich: Lincom.Google Scholar
Prieto, P., Aguilar, L., Mascaró, I., Torres-Tamarit, F.J., & Vanrell, M.M
(2009) L’etiquetatge prosòdic Cat_ToBI. Estudios de Fonética Experimental, XVIII, 287-309.Google Scholar
Prieto, P., Estrella, A., Thorson, J., & Vanrell, M.M
(2012) Is prosodic development correlated with grammatical development? Evidence from emerging intonation in Catalan and Spanish. Journal of Child Language, 39(2), 221-257. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Prieto, P., Borràs-Comes, J., Cabré, T., Crespo-Sendra, V., Mascaró, I., Roseano, P., Sichel-Bazin, R., & Vanrell, M.M
(2015) Intonational phonology of Catalan and its dialectal varieties. In S. Frota & P. Prieto (Eds.) Intonational Variation in Romance (pp. 9-62). Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Romera, M., & Elordieta, G
(2013) Prosodic accommodation in language contact: Spanish intonation in Majorca. International Journal of the Sociology of Language, 221, 127-151.Google Scholar
Vallduví, E
(1992) The informational component. New York, NY: Garland.Google Scholar
Vanrell, M.M. & Fernández Soriano, O
(2013) Variation at the interfaces in Ibero-Romance: Catalan and Spanish prosody and word order. Catalan Journal of Linguistics, 12, 253-282.Google Scholar
van Santen, J., Prud’hommeaux, E., Black, L., & Mitchell, M
(2010) Computational prosodic markers for autism. Autism, 14, 215-236. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Warren, P
(2005) Patterns of late rising in New Zealand English: Intonational variation of intonational change? Language Variation and Change, 17(2), 209-230. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Wilbur, R.B
(1997) A prosodic/pragmatic explanation for word order variation in ASL with typological implications. In K.D. Lee, E. Sweetser, & M.H. Verspoor (Eds.), Lexical and syntactic constructions and the construction of meaning (pp. 89-104). Amsterdam: John Benjamins. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Zubizarreta, M.L
(1998) Prosody, focus, and word order. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.Google Scholar