Functions of prosody
The prosody of the utterance performs a number of functions, the basic of which are constitutive, distinctive and identificatory.
1. The constitutive function is to form utterances as communicative units. Prosody unifies words into utterances, thus giving the latter the final form without which they cannot exist. A succession of words arranged syntactically is not a communicative unit until a certain prosodic pattern is attached to it. E.G. "Pete has left for Leningrad" is not a communicative unit until it is pronounced , i.e. until it acquires a certain pitch—and— stress pattern. Prosody is the only language device that transform words as vocabulary items into comnunicative units — utterances. In written speech prosodic features are to some extent indicated by punctuation marks, e.g. "Fire!" is a command or an exclamation, depending on the situation in which it occurs, "Fire?" — a question, "Fire". - a. statement.
Prosody forms all communicative types of utterances — statements, questions, imperatives, exclamations and modal (attitudinal) types: — e.g. categoric statements, non-categoric, perfunctory statements, quizzical statements, certainty and uncertainty questions, insistent questions, etc. In constituting an utterance, prosody at the same time performs the segmentative and de limitative function. It segments connected discourse into utterances and intonation groups, and simultaneously delimits them one from another, showing relations between them. It also signals the semantic nucleus and other semantically important words of an utterance (or an intonation group). Prosody also constitutes phonetic styles of speech
2. The distinctive function of prosody manifests itself in several particular functions, depending on the meaning which is differentiated. These are communicative—distinctive, modal-distinctive, culminative ("theme— rheme") distinctive, syntactical — distinctive and stylistic—distinctive functions.
The communicative —distinctive function is to differentiate the communicative types of utterances, i.e. statements, questions, exclamations, imperatives, and communicative subtypes: within statements — statesments proper, answers, announcements, etc.; within questions — first instance questions, repeated questions, echo questions; within imperatives — commands, requests and so on.
The modal-distinctive (attitudinal-distinctive) function of prosody manifests itself in differentiating modal meanings of utterances (such as certainty versus uncertainty, definiteness versus indefiniteness) and the speaker's attitudes (for instance, a reserved, dispassionate versus involved, interested attitude, or antagonistic versus friendly attitude and so on). Into this function some phoneticians include differentiation of the speaker's emotions, the emotional function.
The culminative — distinctive function of prosody manifests itself in differentiating the location of the semantic nucleus of utterances and other semantically important words. This function is often called logical, predicative and accentual.
The adherents to the theory of "sentence perspective" claim that in this way prosody indicates the "theme-rheme" organization of an utterance, i.e. it distinguishes between what is already known and what is new in the utterance.
The syntactical—distinctive function of prosody is to differentiate syntactical types of sentences and syntactical relations in sentences.
Stylistic — distinctive function of prosody manifests itself in that prosody differentiates pronunciation (phonetic) styles, determined by extralinguistic factors.
3. The identificatory function of prosody is to provide a basis for the hearer's identification of the communicative and modal type of an utterance, its semantic and syntactical structure with the situation of the discourse.
All the functions of prosody are fulfilled simultaneously and cannot be separated one from another. They show that utterance prosody is linguistically significant and meaningful.
- 2.Articulatory classification of speech sounds.
- 5. Methods of the identification of phonemes in a language
- 10. Types of transcription
- 13. Rp as the standard english accent.
- 14. Pronunciatin varieties of british english
- The Scottish type of English Pronunciation
- 3) Peculiarities of ga intonation.
- Lingustically relevant degrees of word stress
- 17. The accentual tendencies in English. Basic word stress patterns in English
- 18. Speech prosody. Its perceptible qualities and acoustic properties. Meanings of prosody
- 19. Prosody and intonation. Utterance prosody and its linguistic functions.
- 2. Components of intonation and the structure of English intonation group.
- 3. The phonological aspect of intonation.
- Functions of prosody
- 20. The components of utterance prosody and units of its analysis. Pitch
- 21. The tonal subsystem of utterance prosody and units of its analysis. Pitch
- 22. The structure of a prosodic contour (intonation group) in English. The functions of its elements. Supraphrasal unities
- Division of Utterances into Intonation-Groups
- 24. Utterance stress in English, its phonetic nature . And function. The relationship between utterance stress and word stress in English the stress pattern of english words. Tendencies
- Utterance stress
- Types of utterance stress. Factors conditioning the location of utterance stress. Utterance stress
- Speech rhythm and utterance stress.Rhythm
- 28.The phonetic nature and types of speech rhythm in different languages.
- 30. The notion of speech style. Phonetic style-forming means in English.