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Statements

Subject Item
n2:RIV%2F00216224%3A14210%2F96%3A00011270%21RIV%2F2005%2FGA0%2F142105%2FN
rdf:type
n17:Vysledek skos:Concept
dcterms:description
The present article is a study of two prosodic features, tone unit length and nucleus position. It is based on an anlysis of spoken texts selected from the London-Lund Corpus and the Corpus of Spoken Czech. The study supports the definition of tone units as the phonological realisation of information chunks of a convenient size for processing by both speakers and listeners; the average length of tone units was found to be around 4.3 words with a standard deviation of about 2.7 in both the English and Czech texts. The examined texts, both English and Czech, contained a high percentage (almost 18 %) of one-word tone units. The frequent occurrence of one-word tone units seems to be typical of unprepared conversation. Monologues, as other studies have shown, contain a much lower percentage of one-word tone units. The study suggests that both English and Czech speakers have a strong tendency to place the nucleus towards the end of a tone unit. The tendency seems to be stronger in Czech, where the average n The present article is a study of two prosodic features, tone unit length and nucleus position. It is based on an anlysis of spoken texts selected from the London-Lund Corpus and the Corpus of Spoken Czech. The study supports the definition of tone units as the phonological realisation of information chunks of a convenient size for processing by both speakers and listeners; the average length of tone units was found to be around 4.3 words with a standard deviation of about 2.7 in both the English and Czech texts. The examined texts, both English and Czech, contained a high percentage (almost 18 %) of one-word tone units. The frequent occurrence of one-word tone units seems to be typical of unprepared conversation. Monologues, as other studies have shown, contain a much lower percentage of one-word tone units. The study suggests that both English and Czech speakers have a strong tendency to place the nucleus towards the end of a tone unit. The tendency seems to be stronger in Czech, where the average n The present article is a study of two prosodic features, tone unit length and nucleus position. It is based on an anlysis of spoken texts selected from the London-Lund Corpus and the Corpus of Spoken Czech. The study supports the definition of tone units as the phonological realisation of information chunks of a convenient size for processing by both speakers and listeners; the average length of tone units was found to be around 4.3 words with a standard deviation of about 2.7 in both the English and Czech texts. The examined texts, both English and Czech, contained a high percentage (almost 18 %) of one-word tone units. The frequent occurrence of one-word tone units seems to be typical of unprepared conversation. Monologues, as other studies have shown, contain a much lower percentage of one-word tone units. The study suggests that both English and Czech speakers have a strong tendency to place the nucleus towards the end of a tone unit. The tendency seems to be stronger in Czech, where the average n
dcterms:title
Nucleus position and tone unit length in English and Czech Nucleus position and tone unit length in English and Czech Nucleus position and tone unit length in English and Czech
skos:prefLabel
Nucleus position and tone unit length in English and Czech Nucleus position and tone unit length in English and Czech Nucleus position and tone unit length in English and Czech
skos:notation
RIV/00216224:14210/96:00011270!RIV/2005/GA0/142105/N
n3:strany
15-21
n3:aktivita
n11:P
n3:aktivity
P(GA405/93/1247)
n3:dodaniDat
n8:2005
n3:domaciTvurceVysledku
n18:4224582
n3:druhVysledku
n15:D
n3:duvernostUdaju
n19:S
n3:entitaPredkladatele
n21:predkladatel
n3:idSjednocenehoVysledku
830751
n3:idVysledku
RIV/00216224:14210/96:00011270
n3:jazykVysledku
n12:eng
n3:klicovaSlova
comparative study, intonation, nucleus position, tone unit length, word-order, corpus
n3:klicoveSlovo
n7:comparative%20study n7:corpus n7:nucleus%20position n7:tone%20unit%20length n7:intonation n7:word-order
n3:kontrolniKodProRIV
[066681A1C0DB]
n3:mistoKonaniAkce
žádná konferecne se nekonala
n3:mistoVydani
Brno
n3:nazevZdroje
Brno Studies in English 22
n3:obor
n20:AI
n3:pocetDomacichTvurcuVysledku
1
n3:pocetTvurcuVysledku
2
n3:projekt
n4:GA405%2F93%2F1247
n3:rokUplatneniVysledku
n8:1996
n3:tvurceVysledku
Mosey, Bryan Chamonikolasová, Jana
n3:typAkce
n6:CST
n3:zahajeniAkce
1996-01-01+01:00
s:numberOfPages
7
n10:hasPublisher
MU
n13:isbn
80-210-1421-0
n16:organizacniJednotka
14210