Coleridge was thus for him the latest in a line of prospective English prosodic proselytes. |
|
The distinction casts light on Coleridge's prosodic jottings in his notebooks, but is not directly germane to the present concern. |
|
Another recurrent prosodic trait in this book is the repetition of tercets. |
|
It is well known that speakers rely on prosodic and gestural features at the time of producing and understanding verbal irony. |
|
Comprehension of phonetic and prosodic information with audio-visual and linguistic cues in Alzheimer disease and mild cognitive impairment. |
|
It is my impression that prosodic focus without syntactic reorganization is possible at other levels of the Creole continuum not at the basilectal level. |
|
Is it by chance that the term accent has been chosen to designate both a prosodic prominence and a foreign way of speaking? |
|
What emerges is a picture of a culture that relied on the grammatical, rhetorical, and prosodic tools that can be found in surviving early medieval miscellanies. |
|
In general, the successful seducers paid more attention to and were more nuanced in modulating the prosodic aspects of their voices than were the unsuccessful seducers. |
|
However, I propose that in the case of topicalization, young deaf children have exploited an alternative, prosodic way of marking topics that is easily overlooked. |
|
Sometime later, a number of linguists and aestheticians turned their attention to prosodic structure and the nature of poetic rhythm. |
|
This article is a corpus-based study of prosodic variation in the French language as spoken in Alsace, Belgium and Romand Switzerland. |
|
Patterned arrangements of tones and the use of pauses, or caesuras, along with rhyme determine the Chinese prosodic forms. |
|
Two developments in 19th-century poetic techniques, however, had greater impact than any prosodic theory formulated during the period. |
|
They include the automatic learning of syntactic, prosodic, and dialogue structures: which aim to make the implementation of new systems easier. |
|
Automatic alignment of large spoken corpora and pitch tracking enabled us to reveal or at least quantify prosodic differences between French varieties spoken in Alsace, Belgium and Romand Switzerland. |
|
A contrastive analysis of French and Polish prosodic phrasing will follow, with further details for learners and a few other Polish speakers of French. |
|
Her playing is prosodic and iambically organized. |
|
The second category, the paralinguistic context, involves the prosodic variations that convey semantic and syntactic information, as well as the emotional state. |
|
In his often depurated work, Surrealist ideals, Zen, and the repurposing of traditional Japanese prosodic forms interpenetrate in startling ways. |
|
|
If phonemic characteristics and prosodic dimensions are important, a foreign accent should reflect both segmental and suprasegmental difficulties. |
|
The prosodic styles of Whitman, Pound, and Eliot though clearly linked to various historical antecedents are innovative expressions of their individual talents. |
|
The wonderful Chaldean funeral hymns with their immensely rich theological content, cannot easily be translated into languages with a different prosodic structure. |
|
But it may also be the case that composers wrote their pieces in such a way because these are general elements that are located in the brain or in prosodic associations. |
|
These may be prosodic or gestural features that are imitated, which would then be cross-cultural, but specific cultural elements will probably also play a role here. |
|
In this part, the author presents a prosodic hierarchy describing syllables, moras, feet, cola and a typology for words and stress. |
|
Through Buddhism's and Hindu's influence, a variety of Chanda prosodic meters were received via Ceylon. |
|
Rather than acting on segments, phonological processes act on distinctive features within prosodic groups. |
|
For example, the stress mark may be doubled to indicate an extra degree of stress, such as prosodic stress in English. |
|
The stress placed on words within sentences is called sentence stress or prosodic stress. |
|
Various prosodic elements, such as tone, syllable length, and stress, may be found in alternations. |
|
One characteristic shared by many clitics is a lack of prosodic independence. |
|
The only exception to this is that a sound change may or may not recognise word boundaries, even when they are not indicated by prosodic clues. |
|
In this sentence, the use of bent on self-improvement develops an ironic intention because of the semantic prosodic clash between bent on and self-improvement. |
|
I will consider cases of movement epenthesis, movement deletion, cliticization, compound formation, classifier constructions, derivation, and nonmanual prosodic features. |
|
Experimental results show that infants have access to intermediate prosodic phrases during the first year of life, and use these to constrain lexical segmentation. |
|
Prosodic alternations are sometimes analyzed as not as a type of apophony but rather as prosodic affixes, which are known, variously, as suprafixes, superfixes, or simulfixes. |
|
Some sources have described it as a glottal stop, but this is a very infrequent realization, and today phoneticians consider it a phonation type or a prosodic phenomenon. |
|
Pope is now considered the dominant poetic voice of his century, a model of prosodic elegance, biting wit, and an enduring, demanding moral force. |
|
Therefore, syntactic mechanisms including features and transformations include prosodic information regarding focus that is passed to the semantics and phonology. |
|
|
For example, in the suffix areny, meaning 'from', is a stress-bearing unit, and thus its own prosodic word, separate from the preceding word Ankarr, a placename. |
|
Prosodic groups can be as small as a part of a syllable or as large as an entire utterance. |
|