Academic literature on the topic 'Langues mandé – Prosodie (linguistique)'
Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles
Consult the lists of relevant articles, books, theses, conference reports, and other scholarly sources on the topic 'Langues mandé – Prosodie (linguistique).'
Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.
You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.
Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Langues mandé – Prosodie (linguistique)":
Rialland, Annie. "Systèmes prosodiques africains : ou fondements empiriques pour un modèle multilinéaire." Nice, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988NICE2019.
Vydrina, Alexandra. "A corpus‐based description of Kakabe, a Western Mande language : prosody in grammar." Thesis, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017USPCF015/document.
This thesis provides a corpus‐based description of Kakabe, a Mande language spoken in Guinea, with a focus on phonology. It consists of a short grammatical sketch and two parts dedicated to the analysis of the segmental and the suprasegmental phonology. Segmental phonological processes can be conditioned by metrical constraints, the ban on hiatus, prosodic phrasing and morphological context. Vowel deletion and vowel assimilation which serve to resolve hiatus, apply clause‐internally, as well as across clause boundaries. I also describe various strategies of loanword adaptation used in Kakabe, such as vowel epenthesis and consonant cluster simplification. Kakabe is a terraced‐level tone language (H vs. L), featuring downdrift, downstep, H raising, floating L, and a number of tonal processes, such as OCP style H‐insertion between two L domains, tone spread and leveling of HLH contour. As a result, the distance between the underlying lexical tones and their surface realization can be rather important. Each tonal process is applied within one particular prosodic unit. Therefore, tonal processes participate in phrasing the speech into prosodic units.Kakabe uses a number of boundary tones to signal illocutionary force of the utterance. Lexical tones and boundary tones coexists with intonational operations on the F0 curve. Intonational tone raising is associated with the H% and HL%boundary tones. Apart from that, it affects polarity items, the universal quantifier, and other pragmatically prominent lexemes, such as ideophones and intensifiers. The appendices include a Kakabe‐French dictionary, comprising 3400 entries, and an oral corpus of 12 hours of various genres, transcribed, glossed and time‐aligned with audio and video
Grégoire, Henri-Claude. "Tonétique et tonologie d'un groupe de langues mandé : étude théorique et expérimentale." Paris 3, 1990. http://www.theses.fr/1990PA030105.
This doctoral dissertation is concerned with a group of languages belonging to the southern-eastern division of the mande family. Taking several languages into account leads to a much more comprehensive view of the interactions between the vocalic, consonantal, syllabic and tonetic systems than would be possible with a single language. A first section is devoted to the descriptive and distributional features of these systems, as well as to a survey of classification problems, including alexico-statistical analysis. The second section opens with a detailled acoutic analysis of the tonetic systems, leading to a description of tonal rules at the sentence level. A companion volume contains a comprehensive selection of the survey materials (wsord and sentence lists, transcripts and translations of dialogues and tales), as well as a large sample of documented fundamental frequency curves
Michaud, Alexis. "Prosodie de langues à tons (naxi et vietnamien), prosodie de l'anglais : éclairages croisés." Phd thesis, Université de la Sorbonne nouvelle - Paris III, 2005. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00130149.
Nsanzabiga, Eugène. "Structures prosodiques comparées du Rushobyo et du Kinyarwanda standard." Nice, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988NICE2007.
First of all, this study deals with the sociolinguistic situation of Rushobyo, considering it as the result of the mixing of several linguistic communities ans establishes its geographic delimitation localizing its nucleus and somme small groups of speakers. After this, it establishes, in constrastive perspective with standard Kinyarwanda, tonologic schemes of nominals and verbals and intonative schemes. Then it defines the rules of demarcation resulting proceedings of morphophonologic regularization : we mean syntactic regularization (generalization of syncretism of temporal markers, focalization markers and verbal classes), syllabic and rythmic regularization (lengthening compensatoring) prosodic regularization (repetition of intonative schemes). These elements create tonal changes, caracterized by the absence of tonal variation, the loose of the distinctive function and fixity of tonal elements whose only vestiges are the anticipation and yntactic tone inherent with modes and which have nawadays only constrastive function. These elements demonstrate the passage of Rushobyo from tonal system to accentual system with free accent situated on the first infix, the antepenult syllabe and final syllabe. Its final evolutive stage would be an accentual system with fix accent on the antepenult syllabe which already predominates
Philippson, Gérard. "Tons et accent dans les langues bantu d'Afrique orientale : étude comparative typologique et diachronique." Paris 5, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992PA05H011.
This work studies the very diverse prosodic systems of east African bantu languages, on the basis of non-linear (autosegmental and metrical) phonology. We find a one end purely tonal systems (like kikuyu) and at the other end systems with purely demarcative penultimate stress, with all intermediate cases. After presenting the basic principles of autosegmental and metrical phonology and referring to previous works on the subject in our study area, we move to a classification and then to a typology of tonal and accentual processes, the interaction between tone accent and syntactic domains, etc. Finally, tonal correspondences with common bantu are established and a hypothesis is presented according to which the emergence of penultimate accent is the main cause of the evolution of these systems
Khachaturyan, Maria. "Grammaire de la langue mano (mandé-sud) dans une perspective typologique." Thesis, Paris, INALCO, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014INAL0030/document.
This work aims to present a grammatical description – as complete as possible – of a South Mande language, Mano (400,000 speakers in Guinea and Liberia), placing it into a typological context, comparing the language with other Mande languages and distinguishing general typological particularities. The text of the thesis is divided into six chapters: Phonology and phonetics; Morphology; Noun phrase; Verb phrase; Predicative system; Syntax of the clause. Justifying the typological orientation of the thesis, each chapter is concluded by a section providing typological particularities of the data presented in it. A detailed analysis was given, among others, on the following themes: quantitative study of phonotactics; study of the category of number, including its expression and alignment by number; the system of quantification markers; argument structure, corpus study of predicative markers’ distribution; syntax of the clause, especially syntax of the relative clause.The appendices at the end of the thesis contain some important complementary information, including, for instance, complete verbal paradigms. Two of these appendices comprise of glossed texts
Contreras, Roa Leonardo. "Prosodie et apprentissage des langues : étude contrastive de l’interlangue d’apprenants d’anglais francophones et hispanophones." Thesis, Rennes 2, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019REN20053.
This thesis is a study of the prosodic interlanguage of students of English as a foreign language whose native language is French or Spanish. It is organized in two main parts. The first part is a study of the methods of conception and representation of prosody for the analysis of interlanguage – a hybrid linguistic system which includes characteristics of the student's native language, characteristics of the target language, and intermediate developmental or characteristics. This provides a methodological framework for the phonetic analysis and phonological interpretation of this type of prosodic systems. The second part is the implementation of this methodology through a contrastive interlanguage analysis conducted through the study of an oral corpus of students of English as a foreign language. The results show traces of the influence of their respective native languages at the phonetic and phonological levels, as well as developmental characteristics common to both groups of learners. The results serve as a basis for reflection on the levels of abstraction in the study of prosody and on the didactic priorities for teaching oral English at a university level
Blanc, Jean-Marc Dominey Peter Ford. "Traitement de la prosodie par un réseau récurrent temporel un cadre unifié pour l'identification automatique des langues, des attitudes prosodiques, et des catégories lexicales /." Lyon : Université Lumière Lyon 2, 2005. http://demeter.univ-lyon2.fr:8080/sdx/theses/lyon2/2005/blanc_jm.
Bordal, Steien Guri. "Prosodie et contact de langues : le cas du système tonal du français centrafricain." Thesis, Paris 10, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012PA100162/document.
This study is concerned with prosody and language contact. The fact that language contact induces change is well documented, but few studies focus on the prosodic effects of contact-induced change. The aim of this study is to provide a case study of the prosodic system of the contact variety Central African French, which has emerged from the contact between French and the African tone language, Sango.The Central African Republic is a multilingual country with between 60 to 100 different regional languages spoken within its borders in addition to two official languages, the lingua franca Sango and French. French has been the main language of education and of public administration since colonial times. In the capital Bangui, Sango is the most used language in everyday communication whereas French is spoken in professional contexts. This study is based on recordings of spontaneous speech of 12 French-speaking informants from Bangui. Acoustic analyses of the recordings show that the prosody of Central African French shares with Sango some fundamental characteristics: most words have fixed tonal patterns independently of their position in the sentence and every syllable carries a static tone. This system greatly differs from the system of European varieties of French, where the sentence melody is determined at the post-lexical level and depends on factors such as rhythm, syntax and pragmatics. The main conclusion of this study is that Central African French may be classified as a tone language and thus is endowed with a prosodic system that is closer to Sango than to European French. This finding suggests that intonation might change radically in contact situations ; the change is not only superficial but concerns the underlying system