JOURNAL ARTICLE

The Intonation and Pragmatics of Greek wh-Questions

Mary BaltazaniStella GrylliaAmalia Arvaniti

Year: 2019 Journal:   Language and Speech Vol: 63 (1)Pages: 56-94   Publisher: SAGE Publishing

Abstract

We experimentally tested three hypotheses regarding the pragmatics of two tunes (one high-ending, one flat-ending) used with Greek wh-questions: (a) the high-ending tune is associated with information-seeking questions, while the flat-ending tune is also appropriate when wh-questions are not information-seeking, in which case their function can instead be akin to that of a statement; (b) the high-ending tune is more polite, and (c) more appropriate for contexts leading to information-seeking questions. The wh-questions used as experimental stimuli were elicited from four speakers in contexts likely to lead to either information-seeking or non-information-seeking uses. The speakers produced distinct tunes in response to the contexts; acoustic analysis indicates these are best analysed as L*+H L-!H% (rising), and L+H* L-L% (flat). In a perception experiment where participants heard the questions out of context, they chose answers providing information significantly more frequently after high-ending than flat-ending questions, confirming hypothesis (a). In a second experiment testing hypotheses (b) and (c), participants evaluated wh-questions for appropriateness and politeness in information- and non-information-seeking contexts. High-ending questions were rated more appropriate in information-seeking contexts, and more polite independently of context relative to their flat-ending counterparts. Finally, two follow-up experiments showed that the interpretation of the two tunes was not affected by voice characteristics of individual speakers, and confirmed a participant preference for the high-ending tune. Overall, the results support our hypotheses and lead to a compositional analysis of the meaning of the two tunes, while also showing that intonational meaning is determined by both tune and pragmatic context.

Keywords:
Politeness Pragmatics Psychology Context (archaeology) Perception Linguistics Intonation (linguistics) Preference Information seeking Statement (logic) Interpretation (philosophy) Social psychology Cognitive psychology Computer science Mathematics

Metrics

12
Cited By
1.37
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
72
Refs
0.79
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Phonetics and Phonology Research
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Language, Discourse, Communication Strategies
Social Sciences →  Arts and Humanities →  Language and Linguistics
Linguistic Variation and Morphology
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Linguistics and Language

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

Greek wh-questions and the phonology of intonation

Amalia ArvanitiD. Robert Ladd

Journal:   Phonology Year: 2009 Vol: 26 (1)Pages: 43-74
JOURNAL ARTICLE

The Pragmatics Of Wh-In Situ Questions In Greek

Chiou, MichalisVlachos, Christos

Journal:   Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) Year: 2016
JOURNAL ARTICLE

The Pragmatics Of Wh-In Situ Questions In Greek

Chiou, MichalisVlachos, Christos

Journal:   Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) Year: 2016
JOURNAL ARTICLE

The Pragmatics Of Wh-In Situ Questions In Greek

Chiou, MichalisVlachos, Christos

Journal:   Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) Year: 2017
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.