4.2 Article

Final lowering in non-final position

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHONETICS
Volume 32, Issue 3, Pages 313-348

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.wocn.2003.11.001

Keywords

intonation; final lowering; downstep; upstep

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This article argues that a factor contributing to final lowering in intonation is that H tones preceding downstep are scaled higher than H tones not preceding downstep, all else being equal. Final lowering is argued to be (in part) the absence of this effect with the last element of a sequence of downstepped tones. The evidence comes from intonation data recorded with speakers of German from Southern Germany and Austria. In two structures, a sequence of downstepped prenuclear pitch accents PA(1)!PA(2)...!PA(n-1) is continued with a nuclear pitch accent PA(n) that is not downstepped. In both structures, final lowering is found on the last downstepped pitch accent PA(n-1), crucially in penultimate position of the intonation phrase. Here potential triggers for final lowering in the environment are not present (phrase-final position) or present only in one structure (a following L% boundary tone). The application of final lowering in these cases shows that there is a factor contributing to final lowering that affects accentual tones not followed by downstep, regardless of the environment. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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