9 research outputs found

    L’accentuation québécoise : une approche tonale

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    Cet article basé sur une analyse de trois locuteurs cherche à apporter des éléments d’éclaircissement sur les notions d’accent tonal et d’accent dynamique et sur les modalités de réalisation des accents tonals complexes dans le français québécois spontané.This article based on an analysis of three speakers aims at clarifying the distinction between stress accent and pitch accent in French and contributes evidence on the modalities of phonetic implementation of a complex pitch accent in spontaneous Quebec French

    Le syntagme intonatif en langage spontané : étude préliminaire

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    Une étude portant sur le syntagme intonatif (SI) en langage spontané menée à partir d’un corpus de français du Québec révèle des valeurs relativement stables quant à la longueur de ces SI exprimée en termes d’unités prosodiques minimales. La variabilité rencontrée ne peut être exprimée à l’aide de paramètres sociaux.A study of intonational phrasing (IP) in a corpus of spontaneous speech of Quebec French reveals relatively stable values of length of IPs when expressed in terms of minimal prosodic units. Variability in IP length is not statistically related to the social characteristics of the speakers

    Social Salience and the Sociolinguistic Monitor: A Case Study of ING and TH-fronting in Britain

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    This article examines the role of social salience, or the relative ability of a linguistic variable to evoke social meaning, in structuring listeners’ perceptions of quantitative sociolinguistic distributions. Building on the foundational work of Labov et al. (2006, 2011) on the “sociolinguistic monitor” (a proposed cognitive mechanism responsible for sociolinguistic perception), we examine whether listeners’ evaluative judgments of speech change as a function of the type of variable presented. We consider two variables in British English, ING and TH-fronting, which we argue differ in their relative social salience. Replicating the design of Labov et al.’s studies, we test 149 British listeners’ reactions to different quantitative distributions of these variables. Our experiments elicit a very different pattern of perceptual responses than those reported previously. In particular, our results suggest that a variable’s social salience determines both whether and how it is perceptually evaluated. We argue that this finding is crucial for understanding how sociolinguistic information is cognitively processed

    Variation

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    Sociolinguistic research on French in Montréal

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