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Resumen de Prosodic phonology and its interfaces

Elisabeth Delais-Roussarie

  • It is well established that the speech flow is organized into a prosodic constituent structure that differs from the morphosyntactic and information structure.Indeed, the prosodic units have two major characteristics: (i) they are partly derivedfrom the morphosyntactic and information structure of the sentence to which theyshould give access, and (ii) they constitute domains for the application of phonologicalphenomena. They are studied in all their complexity within Prosodic Phonology, aframework that accounts for the way phonology interacts with the other componentsof the grammar. The aim of this chapter is threefold: (i) presenting the main featuresof Prosodic Phonology, this framework being crucial to study the way prosody interfaces with the other grammatical components; (ii) explaining how the syntaxphonology mapping has been formalized within this framework, in particular toaccount for prosodic phrase formation; and (iii) showing how prosody is constrainedby information related to discourse


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