Affiliation:
1. Indiana University Bloomington
2. McGill University
Abstract
Main prominence is conventionally described as being assigned to the final syllable of phrases in French, but previous quantitative and qualitative work has shown that this is not always the case. Using corpus data from Laurentian French (Saguenay, Quebec), we test the hypothesis that prominence is preferentially assigned to heavy syllables. Our results demonstrate that this is indeed the case, with both codas and heavy vowels attracting prominence away from final syllables, particularly when the final syllable is open. We infer two distinct types of prominence: lexical and phrasal. Lexical prominence, which is marked using duration and amplitude, variably attracts phrasal prominence, which is marked using pitch. We interpret these findings as indicating that the location of phrasal prominence is sensitive to syllable weight and that this prominence is best formally expressed as a pitch accent due to its attraction to lexically prominent syllables.
Publisher
Open Library of the Humanities
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference115 articles.
1. Armstrong, Susan. 1999. Stress and weight in Québec French. Calgary, Canada: University of Calgary MA thesis.
2. Accentuation et niveaux de constituance en français: Enjeux phonologiques et psycholinguistiques;Astésano, CorineBertrand, Roxane;Langue française,2016
3. Indices prosodiques régionaux en français de Belgique. L’apport d’une catégorisation perceptive des données;Bardiaux, Alice;Proceedings of Prosody-Discourse Interface 2013, Lauven,2013