TY - JOUR
T1 - The Pennsylvania English Final Rise-Fall
T2 - Intonation, Pragmatics, and Regional Variation
AU - Blanchette, Frances
AU - De La Rosa Yacomelo, Johan Alberto
AU - Eads, Amanda
AU - Lai, Li Fang
AU - Harman, Amanda
AU - Hunt, Leah
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - In contrast to the common final rising pattern of Mainstream English yes/no questions, these questions may be produced with a final rising then falling intonation in parts of Central and Western Pennsylvania (PA). Researchers have suggested that this pattern is pragmatically conditioned, used either when a particular response is expected, or when the speaker wishes to communicate the answer is not-at-issue. While previous work on this regional final rise-fall pattern has been limited to observations of spontaneous speech, this paper presents the results of a pair of production and perception experiments aimed at obtaining a more detailed characterization of its acoustic correlates and testing hypotheses regarding its pragmatic conditioning. The results replicate and extend previous findings, illustrating highly variable fluctuations in fundamental frequency across yes/no question tokens that share a final rise-fall pattern, and a tendency toward using this pattern to imply that the speaker already has some idea of what the answer to the question will be. Comparison of the perceptions of speakers from Central PA with speakers from outside the Midland Dialect region suggests that pragmatic knowledge of this intonational variant may be region-specific. The results are discussed in the context of recent work in which intonation is shown to be a marker of social group or region, providing an example where regional intonational variation appears to be shaped at least in part by pragmatic meaning.
AB - In contrast to the common final rising pattern of Mainstream English yes/no questions, these questions may be produced with a final rising then falling intonation in parts of Central and Western Pennsylvania (PA). Researchers have suggested that this pattern is pragmatically conditioned, used either when a particular response is expected, or when the speaker wishes to communicate the answer is not-at-issue. While previous work on this regional final rise-fall pattern has been limited to observations of spontaneous speech, this paper presents the results of a pair of production and perception experiments aimed at obtaining a more detailed characterization of its acoustic correlates and testing hypotheses regarding its pragmatic conditioning. The results replicate and extend previous findings, illustrating highly variable fluctuations in fundamental frequency across yes/no question tokens that share a final rise-fall pattern, and a tendency toward using this pattern to imply that the speaker already has some idea of what the answer to the question will be. Comparison of the perceptions of speakers from Central PA with speakers from outside the Midland Dialect region suggests that pragmatic knowledge of this intonational variant may be region-specific. The results are discussed in the context of recent work in which intonation is shown to be a marker of social group or region, providing an example where regional intonational variation appears to be shaped at least in part by pragmatic meaning.
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U2 - 10.1177/00754242241311619
DO - 10.1177/00754242241311619
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105000016022
SN - 0075-4242
JO - Journal of English Linguistics
JF - Journal of English Linguistics
ER -