4.3 Article

Prosodic patterns in Hebrew child-directed speech

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHILD LANGUAGE
Volume 36, Issue 3, Pages 629-656

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S030500090800915X

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The study examines prosodic characteristics of Hebrew speech directed to children between 0;9-3;0 years, based on longitudinal samples of 228,946 tokens (8,075 types). The distribution of prosodic patterns-the number of syllables and stress patterns-is analyzed across three lexical categories, distinguishing not only between open and closed-class items, but also between these two categories and a third, innovative, class, referred to as between-class items. Results indicate that Hebrew CDS consists mainly of mono- and bisyllabic words, with differences between lexical categories; and that the most common stress pattern is word-final, with parallel distributions found for all categories. Additional analyses showed that verbs take word-final stress, but nouns are both trochaic and iambic. Finally, a developmental analysis indicates a significant increase in the number of iambic words in CDS. These findings have clear implications regarding the use of prosody for word segmentation and assignment of lexical class in infancy.

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