The prosody of interrogatives at transition-relevance places in Mandarin Chinese conversation

This study aims to address the issue of the extent to which prosody contributes to projecting possible turn endings in Mandarin Chinese conversation. The research specifically focuses on the realization of the pitch contour of the final syllable in yes/no questions, based on a small scale of study...

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Main Author: Xu, Jun
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2008
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10903/
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author Xu, Jun
author_facet Xu, Jun
author_sort Xu, Jun
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This study aims to address the issue of the extent to which prosody contributes to projecting possible turn endings in Mandarin Chinese conversation. The research specifically focuses on the realization of the pitch contour of the final syllable in yes/no questions, based on a small scale of study of eight map-task-type conversations. The examination of 62 ma-particle yes/no questions and 75 yes/no questions with the construction of ‘A-not-A’ or ‘Copula-NEG’ suggests falling intonation is the most prominent pitch contour in yes/no questions at ends of turns in map-task-type conversations in Mandarin Chinese. The analysis of my data has also shown that the yes/no interrogative might have a terminal level, and they may end in rising and falling. Another finding is that the underlying tone of the last toned syllable plays a crucial role on the surface of the final pitch movement of yes/no interrogatives ending with toned syllables. On the basis of this finding, inspection of the turn-final declarative demonstrates that the same final pitch patterns displayed in the ‘A-not-A’ interrogatives ending with toned syllables exist in the turn-final declaratives in my data. This research suggests that prosody plays a restricted role in projecting possible transition relevance places in Mandarin Chinese conversation, since prosody, particularly pitch, may be primarily used to differentiate meaning at the lexical level. Despite the limited number of participants and recorded conversations, these findings might not only contribute to the study of the role of prosody in conversation in general, but also provide some insights into the final pitch movement of the yes/no question in Mandarin Chinese.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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language English
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spelling nottingham-109032025-02-28T13:18:55Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10903/ The prosody of interrogatives at transition-relevance places in Mandarin Chinese conversation Xu, Jun This study aims to address the issue of the extent to which prosody contributes to projecting possible turn endings in Mandarin Chinese conversation. The research specifically focuses on the realization of the pitch contour of the final syllable in yes/no questions, based on a small scale of study of eight map-task-type conversations. The examination of 62 ma-particle yes/no questions and 75 yes/no questions with the construction of ‘A-not-A’ or ‘Copula-NEG’ suggests falling intonation is the most prominent pitch contour in yes/no questions at ends of turns in map-task-type conversations in Mandarin Chinese. The analysis of my data has also shown that the yes/no interrogative might have a terminal level, and they may end in rising and falling. Another finding is that the underlying tone of the last toned syllable plays a crucial role on the surface of the final pitch movement of yes/no interrogatives ending with toned syllables. On the basis of this finding, inspection of the turn-final declarative demonstrates that the same final pitch patterns displayed in the ‘A-not-A’ interrogatives ending with toned syllables exist in the turn-final declaratives in my data. This research suggests that prosody plays a restricted role in projecting possible transition relevance places in Mandarin Chinese conversation, since prosody, particularly pitch, may be primarily used to differentiate meaning at the lexical level. Despite the limited number of participants and recorded conversations, these findings might not only contribute to the study of the role of prosody in conversation in general, but also provide some insights into the final pitch movement of the yes/no question in Mandarin Chinese. 2008-03 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10903/1/Thesismaster-JUNXU-2008Finl.pdf Xu, Jun (2008) The prosody of interrogatives at transition-relevance places in Mandarin Chinese conversation. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham.
spellingShingle Xu, Jun
The prosody of interrogatives at transition-relevance places in Mandarin Chinese conversation
title The prosody of interrogatives at transition-relevance places in Mandarin Chinese conversation
title_full The prosody of interrogatives at transition-relevance places in Mandarin Chinese conversation
title_fullStr The prosody of interrogatives at transition-relevance places in Mandarin Chinese conversation
title_full_unstemmed The prosody of interrogatives at transition-relevance places in Mandarin Chinese conversation
title_short The prosody of interrogatives at transition-relevance places in Mandarin Chinese conversation
title_sort prosody of interrogatives at transition-relevance places in mandarin chinese conversation
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10903/