• Forthcoming titles
      • New in paperback
      • New titles by subject
      • September 2024
      • August 2024
      • July 2024
      • June 2024
      • New serials
      • Latest issues
      • Currently in production
      • Active series
      • Other series
      • Collections
      • Open-access books
      • Text books & Course books
      • Dictionaries & Reference
      • By JB editor
      • Active serials
      • Other
      • By JB editor
      • Printed catalogs
      • E-book collections
      • Amsterdam (Main office)
      • Philadelphia (North American office)
      • General
      • US, Canada & Mexico
      • E-books
      • Examination & Desk Copies
      • General information
      • Access to the electronic edition
      • Terms of Use
      • Journal collections
      • Journal mutations
      • E-newsletter
      • Book Gazette
Cover not available
Part of
English Prosody in First and Second Language Speakers: A contrastive interlanguage analysis across intonational dimensions
[Studies in Corpus Linguistics 120] 2024
► pp. ix–x

List of tables

Table 1.Comparison of selected SLA theories
Table 2.Overview of studies on L2 prosody of Czech, German, and Spanish learners of English
Table 3.Simplified description of tunes
Table 4.Overview of ToBI labels for MAE, Czech, German, and Spanish
Table 5.Prosodic differences between AmE, Czech, German, and Spanish compared to BrE
Table 6.Number of speakers, word count, and duration of annotated stretches
Table 7.L2 interviewee profiles
Table 8.L1 interviewee profiles
Table 9.Interviewer profiles: L1, gender, and number of interviews
Table 10.Information about the selected recordings
Table 11.Tone inventory for the annotation of L1 and L2 speech
Table 12.F0 labels
Table 13.Number of quoted ips by variety of English
Table 14.Dependent variables
Table 15.Independent variables I (sociolinguistic, learner, and contextual variables)
Table 16.Independent variables II (linguistic variables)
Table 17.Overview of uptalk instances by VARIETY and SEX
Table 18.Frequent uptalk users in the selected corpus sample
Table 19.Uptalk frequency by position and interviewer interaction
Table 20.Summary of all observed non-native-like features by interlanguage
This content is being prepared for publication; it may be subject to changes.
Share via FacebookShare via TwitterShare via LinkedInShare via WhatsApp
About us | Disclaimer | Privacy policy | | | | Antiquariathttps://benjamins.com