Annual Report of the Institute of Phonetics University of Copenhagen https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC <p>The series ARIPUC (Annual Report of the Institute of Phonetics, University of Copenhagen) ISSN 0589-6681 comprises 23 volumes published between 1967 and 1989. The electronic versions E-ISSN 2794-3224 are scans of printed volumes obtained mainly from the university library. They sometimes feature handwritten student notes etc. </p> <p>The articles are reissued online (February 2022) with explicit or assumed consent from the authors. Unfortunately, it has not been possible to get in touch with all authors. Copyright holders wishing to object to the online reissue of a paper should write to the contact person named below.</p> en-US <p>Copyright holder author</p> juul@hum.ku.dk (Holger Juul ) tidsskrift.dk@kb.dk (tidsskrift.dk) Sun, 01 Jan 1989 00:00:00 +0100 OJS 3.3.0.13 http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss 60 Cover and title page https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131899 <p>No abstract</p> ARIPUC Copyright (c) 1989 Editor https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131899 Sun, 01 Jan 1989 00:00:00 +0100 Contents https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131900 <p>No abstract</p> ARIPUC Copyright (c) 1989 Editor https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131900 Sun, 01 Jan 1989 00:00:00 +0100 Editors' note https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131901 <p>No abstract</p> ARIPUC Copyright (c) 1989 Editor https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131901 Sun, 01 Jan 1989 00:00:00 +0100 Stress group patterns, sentence accents and sentence intonation in southern Jutland (Sønderborg and Tønder) - with a view to German https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131902 <p>This paper investigates prosodic stress group patterns,&nbsp;the presence and manifestation of default and&nbsp;focal sentence accents and the nature of sentence intonation&nbsp;signalling in Standard Danish spoken on a&nbsp;substratum of South Jutland dialects, viz. Sønderborg&nbsp;and Tønder, and in two varieties of German,&nbsp;Standard North German and Flensburg. The following&nbsp;facts appear: <span style="text-decoration: underline;">sentence intonation</span> (understood to&nbsp;encompass both utterance function and utterance juncture)&nbsp;is signalled globally in Tønder, locally in&nbsp;Sønderborg, and with a mixture of global and local&nbsp;signalling in German. <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Default accents</span> are nonexistent&nbsp;in the two Danish varieties, optional in&nbsp;German. <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Focus</span> is signalled, optionally (and never&nbsp;in final position), by stress reduction of the surroundings&nbsp;in the Danish regions, but is compulsory&nbsp;and takes the shape of a proper sentence accent,&nbsp;though modest, in German. Sønderborg and German have&nbsp;unambiguous <span style="text-decoration: underline;">final lengthening</span>, whereas both lengthening&nbsp;and shortening finally occurs in Tønder. <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Prosodic&nbsp;stress group patterns</span> suffer a clean truncation when&nbsp;their duration is shortened in the Danish regions,&nbsp;but a mixture of compression and truncation in German.&nbsp;Finally, Tønder has stød, Sønderborg and (of course)&nbsp;German do not.</p> Nina Grønnum Thorsen Copyright (c) 1989 Author https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131902 Sun, 01 Jan 1989 00:00:00 +0100 What language do "the spirits of the yellow leaves" speak?: A case of conflicting lexical and phonological evidence https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131903 <p>This paper (which in part summarizes two&nbsp;papers to appear in <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Acta Orientalia</span> but&nbsp;which presents separate information as&nbsp;well) deals with some issues raised by&nbsp;descriptive and comparative linguistic&nbsp;work in northern Thailand. The putative&nbsp;Austroasiatic languages "Yumbri" and "Mrabri"&nbsp;(more correctly: Mlabri) have been&nbsp;assigned to "Khmuic" within the Mon-Khmer&nbsp;languages, but the relationship between&nbsp;these two idioms has been a controversial&nbsp;issue. On the basis of recent fieldwork&nbsp;all existing data on "Yumbri" and "Mrabri"&nbsp;can be shown to reflect one and the same&nbsp;language Mlabri in spite of wide discrepancies&nbsp;in notation; these do not even reveal&nbsp;major <span style="text-decoration: underline;">phonological</span> dialect differences&nbsp;whereas there are conspicuously different&nbsp;<span style="text-decoration: underline;">lexical</span> usages. This has not so far been&nbsp;properly understood because of difficulties&nbsp;in the interpretation of earlier data which&nbsp;were all gathered by amateurs. - As for the&nbsp;tentative genetic classification of Mlabri&nbsp;as <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Khmuic</span>, the lexical evidence used to&nbsp;substantiate this claim now turns out to be&nbsp;controversial: a large number of the Khmuic&nbsp;words in Mlabri are rather direct reflexes&nbsp;of en early stage of Tin, a language that&nbsp;has been assigned to the Khmuic branch of&nbsp;Mon-Khmer. Thus, it is <span style="text-decoration: underline;">either</span> the case&nbsp;that Mlabri and Tin are sister-languages&nbsp;(forming a "Tinic" branch of Khmuic) <span style="text-decoration: underline;">or</span>&nbsp;that Mlabri has early borrowings from Tin.</p> Jørgen Rischel Copyright (c) 1989 Author https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131903 Sun, 01 Jan 1989 00:00:00 +0100 Syntax, morphology, and phonology in text-to-speech systems https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131904 <p>The paper is concerned with the integration of linguistic information&nbsp;in text-to-speech systems. Research in synthesis proper is at&nbsp;a stage where the need for systematic integration of comprehensive&nbsp;linguistic information in such systems is making itself felt&nbsp;more than ever. A surface structure parsing system is presented&nbsp;whose main virtue is that it permits linguists to express syntactic&nbsp;as well as lexical and morphological regularities and irregularities&nbsp;of a language in a simple and easy-to-learn formalism. Most&nbsp;aspects of the system are seen in the light of Danish and -&nbsp;sporadically - English and Finnish surface structure.</p> Peter Molbæk Hansen Copyright (c) 1989 Author https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131904 Sun, 01 Jan 1989 00:00:00 +0100 Institute of Phonetics, January 1 – April 30, 1988 https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131905 <p>No abstract</p> ARIPUC Copyright (c) 1989 Author https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/article/view/131905 Sun, 01 Jan 1989 00:00:00 +0100