Tue-1-10-3 Scaling processes of clause chains in Pitjantjatjara

Rebecca Defina(University of Melbourne), Catalina Torres(University of Melbourne) and Hywel Stoakes(University of Melbourne)
Abstract: Clause chains are a syntactic strategy for combining multiple clauses into a single unit. They are reported in many languages, including Korean and Turkish. However, they have seen relatively little focused research. In particular, prosodic features are often mentioned in descriptions of clause chaining, however there have been vanishingly few investigations. Corpus-based studies of the prosody of clause chains in two unrelated languages of Papua New Guinea report that they are typically produced as a sequence of Intonation phrases united by pitch-scaling of the L% boundary tones in each clause with only the final, finite, clause descending to a full L%. The present study presents the first experimental investigation of the prosody of clause chains. Our investigation focuses on one type of clause chain in the Australian Indigenous language Pitjantjatjara. We examine a set of 120 clause chains read out by three native Pitjantjatjara speakers. Prosodic analysis reveals that these Pitjantjatjara clause chains are produced within a single Intonation Phrase. Speakers do not pause between the clauses in the chain, there is consistent linear downstep throughout the phrase, phrase final lowering occurs at the end of the utterance. This differs from previous impressionistic studies of the prosody of clause chains.
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