Phonetics and phonology of Unangan (Eastern Aleut) intonation

Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1999 This dissertation gives the first detailed description of the phonetics and phonology of the intonation system of Unangan (Eastern Aleut), an indigenous Alaskan language. Twelve fluent speakers were recorded giving translations of elicited sentences. T...

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Main Author: Taff, Alice
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1773/8367
id ftunivwashington:oai:digital.lib.washington.edu:1773/8367
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spelling ftunivwashington:oai:digital.lib.washington.edu:1773/8367 2024-06-02T07:54:42+00:00 Phonetics and phonology of Unangan (Eastern Aleut) intonation Taff, Alice 1999 xv, 339 p. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/8367 en_US eng b4328341x 42887172 Thesis 48103 http://hdl.handle.net/1773/8367 Copyright is held by the individual authors. Theses--Linguistics Thesis 1999 ftunivwashington 2024-05-06T11:38:24Z Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1999 This dissertation gives the first detailed description of the phonetics and phonology of the intonation system of Unangan (Eastern Aleut), an indigenous Alaskan language. Twelve fluent speakers were recorded giving translations of elicited sentences. The recordings were analyzed instrumentally and the resulting data were 'smoothed' statistically to investigate patterns in the intonation contours. Five types of utterances were investigated: simple declaratives, yes/no questions, two-clause sentences, noun phrases, and focus contrast sentences. Findings include pitch range and distribution for eight of the speakers. Proposed intonation universals supported by Unangan facts are: declination, major syntactic constituency marking by intonation, falling tone associating with closed topics and rising tone associating with open topics, and (possibly) focus marking by pitch prominence. Language specific findings are: the isomorphy of words with intermediate phrases, a characteristic peak-trough contour for words, a characteristic 'cascade' contour for sentences, an apparent syntactic connection between noun phrase structure and intonation, and a sparse use, if any, of pitch accents since there is little evidence of pitch prominence associating with stressed syllables. Declarative and yes-no question contours contrast primarily in sentence-final voicing. A phonological account of the findings is provided using a two-level tone system. The tone inventory includes a H* pitch accent, H, L, LH, and ↑H phrase accents, and L% and H% boundary tones. This research expands the prosodic analysis of the Eskimo/Aleut language family, allowing for comparisons within and outside the family. The findings here for Unangan intonation parallel some aspects of the related language, Central Alaskan Yup'ik: e.g., there is a characteristic contour associated with content words; declaratives and yes-no questions appear to have similar contours. Thesis aleut eskimo* Eskimo–Aleut Unangan Yup'ik University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks
institution Open Polar
collection University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks
op_collection_id ftunivwashington
language English
topic Theses--Linguistics
spellingShingle Theses--Linguistics
Taff, Alice
Phonetics and phonology of Unangan (Eastern Aleut) intonation
topic_facet Theses--Linguistics
description Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1999 This dissertation gives the first detailed description of the phonetics and phonology of the intonation system of Unangan (Eastern Aleut), an indigenous Alaskan language. Twelve fluent speakers were recorded giving translations of elicited sentences. The recordings were analyzed instrumentally and the resulting data were 'smoothed' statistically to investigate patterns in the intonation contours. Five types of utterances were investigated: simple declaratives, yes/no questions, two-clause sentences, noun phrases, and focus contrast sentences. Findings include pitch range and distribution for eight of the speakers. Proposed intonation universals supported by Unangan facts are: declination, major syntactic constituency marking by intonation, falling tone associating with closed topics and rising tone associating with open topics, and (possibly) focus marking by pitch prominence. Language specific findings are: the isomorphy of words with intermediate phrases, a characteristic peak-trough contour for words, a characteristic 'cascade' contour for sentences, an apparent syntactic connection between noun phrase structure and intonation, and a sparse use, if any, of pitch accents since there is little evidence of pitch prominence associating with stressed syllables. Declarative and yes-no question contours contrast primarily in sentence-final voicing. A phonological account of the findings is provided using a two-level tone system. The tone inventory includes a H* pitch accent, H, L, LH, and ↑H phrase accents, and L% and H% boundary tones. This research expands the prosodic analysis of the Eskimo/Aleut language family, allowing for comparisons within and outside the family. The findings here for Unangan intonation parallel some aspects of the related language, Central Alaskan Yup'ik: e.g., there is a characteristic contour associated with content words; declaratives and yes-no questions appear to have similar contours.
format Thesis
author Taff, Alice
author_facet Taff, Alice
author_sort Taff, Alice
title Phonetics and phonology of Unangan (Eastern Aleut) intonation
title_short Phonetics and phonology of Unangan (Eastern Aleut) intonation
title_full Phonetics and phonology of Unangan (Eastern Aleut) intonation
title_fullStr Phonetics and phonology of Unangan (Eastern Aleut) intonation
title_full_unstemmed Phonetics and phonology of Unangan (Eastern Aleut) intonation
title_sort phonetics and phonology of unangan (eastern aleut) intonation
publishDate 1999
url http://hdl.handle.net/1773/8367
genre aleut
eskimo*
Eskimo–Aleut
Unangan
Yup'ik
genre_facet aleut
eskimo*
Eskimo–Aleut
Unangan
Yup'ik
op_relation b4328341x
42887172
Thesis 48103
http://hdl.handle.net/1773/8367
op_rights Copyright is held by the individual authors.
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