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Sung, Margaret M. Y. – Journal of Chinese Linguistics, 1979
Studies the relationship between Chinese culture and the use of homonyms and their avoidance in Chinese. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Chinese, Chinese Culture, Cultural Influences, Folk Culture

Sagart, Laurent – Journal of Chinese Linguistics, 1986
Suggests that the departing tone in Chinese arose not through the loss of the final "h," but through a glottalized phonation stage that is still observable. Historical sources supporting this theory are presented, and an account of the development of middle Chinese tones into Mandarin is proposed. (SED)
Descriptors: Consonants, Diachronic Linguistics, Dialect Studies, Language Variation
Aziza, Rose O. – 2002
This paper focuses on tonal alternations in the Urhobo noun phrase. Urhobo is an Edoid language spoken extensively in Delta State, Nigeria. The language has two basic tones, high and low, plus a phenomenon of downstep, both automatic and non-automatic. The noun phrases examined include the noun + noun associative construction, the noun + relative…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Intonation, Morphophonemics, Nouns

Blevins, Juliette – Language, 1993
Argues for underlying tones as opposed to accentual diacritics or metrical representations in Standard Lithuanian nominals. Support for tonal representations come from analyses of (1) the general status of diacritic accents, (2) tonal stability under segment-deletion and demorification in Lithuanian, and (3) data from a Zhemayt dialect. (Contains…
Descriptors: Diacritical Marking, Dialects, Language Research, Lexicology
Liang, Jie; van Heuven, Vincent J. – Brain and Language, 2004
We present an acoustic study of segmental and prosodic properties of words produced by a female speaker of Chinese with left-hemisphere brain damage. We measured the location of the point vowels /a, e, @?, i, y, o, u/ and determined their separation in the vowel plane, and their perceptual distinctivity. Similarly, the acoustic properties of the…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Females, Chinese, Neurological Impairments
Center for Applied Linguistics, Washington, DC. Language and Orientation Resource Center. – 1981
The term "Mien" is used to describe several mountain peoples of Southeast Asia, who migrated from China in the 18th and 19th centuries. Their strong family structure serves their agricultural way of life. The language, though tonal, exhibits many similarities to English. Religious beliefs are animistic, centering around spirits of…
Descriptors: Cultural Background, English (Second Language), History, Indochinese
Stevick, Earl W. – 1968
The morphotonemics of Ganda have been particularly troublesome to linguists trying to describe the tonal structure of Bantu languages. Ganda has three surface tones, and changes in the surface tones parallel changes in grammatical function only part of the time. The author has found that a description of Ganda tones becomes manageable if instead…
Descriptors: Bantu Languages, Deep Structure, Descriptive Linguistics, Ganda

Grieser, DiAnne L.; Kuhl, Patricia K. – Developmental Psychology, 1988
The prosodic features of maternal speech to infants were measured quantitatively in a tonal language, Mandarin Chinese, to determine whether the features were similar to those observed in nontonal languages such as English and German. The pattern of results for Mandarin motherese was similar to that reported for other languages. (PCB)
Descriptors: Infants, Interpersonal Communication, Language Research, Language Styles

Gandour, Jack – Journal of Chinese Linguistics, 1984
Attempts to determine (1) the number and nature of perceptual dimensions of tone in Cantonese, Mandarin, and Taiwanese listeners; (2) to what extent individual differences in tone perception are influenced by a Chinese listener's language background, and (3) whether differences in perceptual saliency of dimensions across Chinese languages can be…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Auditory Perception, Cantonese, Descriptive Linguistics

Norman, Jerry – Journal of Chinese Linguistics, 1973
Proposes to demonstrate that the Qieyun language, long used as the basis for Chinese dialectal comparison, is an inadequate basis for explaining the tonal evolution of some of the Min dialects; research supported by the U.S. Office of Education and the Chinese Linguistics Project at Princeton University. (RS)
Descriptors: Chinese, Diachronic Linguistics, Dialects, Evaluation

Light, Timothy – Journal of Chinese Linguistics, 1977
The traditional division of the Chinese syllable into initial, final, and tone is examined. Distributional criteria are used to justify this analysis as more applicable to the Cantonese syllable than strict segmental analysis. A detailed analysis of the Cantonese final is given and implications for cross-language analyses are discussed. (CHK)
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Cantonese, Chinese, Componential Analysis

Lee, Kathy Yuet Sheung; Chiu, Sung Nok; van Hasselt, Charles Andrew – Language and Speech, 2002
Investigated a new research design for the collection of reliable tone perception data from found children, compared lexical and nonlexical items for testing tone perception ability, and identified the relative ease of perceiving the three basic tone contrasts in Cantonese--high level/high rising, high level/low falling, and high rising/low…
Descriptors: Cantonese, Children, Comparative Analysis, Oral Language
Liu, Siyun; Samuel, Arthur G. – Language and Speech, 2004
In tone languages, the identity of a word depends on its tone pattern as well as its phonetic structure. The primary cue to tone identity is the fundamental frequency (F0) contour. Two experiments explore how listeners perceive Mandarin monosyllables in which all or part of the F0 information has been neutralized. In Experiment 1, supposedly…
Descriptors: Cues, Phonetics, Tone Languages, Mandarin Chinese
Mattock, Karen; Burnham, Denis – Infancy, 2006
Over half the world's population speaks a tone language, yet infant speech perception research has typically focused on consonants and vowels. Very young infants can discriminate a wide range of native and nonnative consonants and vowels, and then in a process of "perceptual reorganization" over the 1st year, discrimination of most…
Descriptors: Tone Languages, Infants, Chinese, English
Zee, Eric – 1990
A phonetic study of vowel devoicing in the Shanghai dialect of Chinese explored the phonetic conditions under which the high, closed vowels and the apical vowel in Shanghai are most likely to become devoiced. The phonetic conditions may be segmental or suprasegmental. Segmentally, the study sought to determine whether a certain type of pre-vocalic…
Descriptors: Chinese, Foreign Countries, Language Research, Linguistic Theory