The Intonation of Polar Questions in North American ("Heritage") Icelandic

Using map task data, this paper investigates the intonation of polar questions in North American (heritage) Icelandic, and compares it to the intonation of polar questions in Icelandic as spoken in Iceland and in North American English as spoken in Manitoba, Canada. The results show that intonationa...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Germanic Linguistics
Main Author: Dehé, Nicole
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-2-10k6a87yqv49c0
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1470542717000125
Description
Summary:Using map task data, this paper investigates the intonation of polar questions in North American (heritage) Icelandic, and compares it to the intonation of polar questions in Icelandic as spoken in Iceland and in North American English as spoken in Manitoba, Canada. The results show that intonational features typical of Icelandic polar questions are present to a considerable extent in heritage Icelandic. Furthermore, intonational features typical of North American English polar questions can frequently be observed in heritage Icelandic, too. In addition, there is a tendency for intonational features typical of Icelandic polar questions to show up in North American English polar questions produced by speakers of heritage Icelandic more often than in North American English polar questions produced by speakers without Icelandic heritage. Focusing on intonation, the present study adds to the evidence for (bidirectional) prosodic interference between a heritage language (here moribund Icelandic) and the dominant language (here North American English). published published