And that PDF also shows that Korean has an allophonic pitch contrast based just on the initial consonant of a word. This could theoretically collapse into a true tonal contrast in some future stage of Korean .... though I think in this case, the tones might have been original, and the three-way stop contrast in modern Korean is a result of the tones causing a split in the consonant series.Richard W wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2020 6:34 pmThai, though more monosyllabic than English, is widely described as having iambic stress. Toneless syllables are fairly restricted, and I think not universally acknowledged.Estav wrote: ↑Wed Jan 22, 2020 11:34 am Standard Chinese, one of the best-known languages with a contrastive tone system, has been argued to have a contrast between stressed and unstressed syllables, although it's disputed. San Duanmu presents arguments for in "Tone and Non-tone Languages: An Alternative to Language Typology and Parameters", 2004, section 3.2.2.1, pages 902-906. It does seem to be the case that, as in many languages, stress in Chinese is predictable (I'm not sure how completely) from the internal structure of a word/phrase.
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And it also confirms that its OK to allow questions to have rising intonation even in a tonal language, which is something Ive always felt uncomfortable about and never really addressed. e.g. in mandarin, if a question ends on a low tone, a rising contour will appear at the end and the syllable will be lengthened. if its on a high tone, the high tone will also be lengthened. so, even in a fully tonal language, syntactic modifications of those tones appear.