Abstract
This paper examines the production of vocative calls in (Northern) Metropolitan French (MF) and Cameroonian French (CF) as it is spoken by native speakers of a tone language, Basaá. While the results of our Discourse Completion Task confirm previous descriptions of MF, they also further our understanding of the relationship between pragmatics and prosody across different groups of French speakers. MF favors the vocative chant in routine contexts and a rising-falling contour in urgent contexts. In contrast, context has little influence on the choice of contour in CF. A melody consisting of the surface realization of lexical tones is produced in both contexts. Regarding acoustic parameters, context only exerts a significant effect on the loudness of vocative calls (RMS amplitude) and has little effect on their F0 height, F0 range and duration. A target-use of vocative calls in CF thus does not amount to target-like use of the original standard target language, MF. Our results provide novel evidence for the transfer of lexical tones onto the contact variety of an intonation language. They also corroborate previous studies involving the pragmatics-prosody interface: the more marked a prosodic pattern is (here, the vocative chant), the more difficult it is to acquire.
Funder
BMBF
European Research Council
University of Toronto to Fatima Hamlaoui
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference123 articles.
1. Fundamental frequency in monolingual English, bilingual English-Russian, and bilingual English-Cantonese young adult women;Altenberg;Journal of Voice,2006
2. Armstrong, Nigel, and Pooley, Tim Chapter Accents and levelling in France, Belgium and Switzerland. Social and Linguistic Change in European French, 2010.
3. The phonetics and phonology of the Polish calling melodies;Arvaniti;Phonetica,2016
4. La prosodie du français en contact;Avanzi;Langages,2016
5. Bardovi-Harlig, Kathleen Chapter Pragmatics and Second Language Acquisition. Handbook of Applied Linguistics, 2002.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献