Patterns and Variation in the Weather Forecast: Can Prosodic Features be Predicted Too?

The aim of this article is to explore a specific type of media programme: the weather forecast. The analysis is based on a corpus of weather forecasts for the UK, mainly from the Met Office, with five different speakers. The weather forecast is considered as a specific oral discourse type which func...

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Main Author: Susan Moore Mauroux
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires du Midi
Series:Anglophonia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/755
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author Susan Moore Mauroux
author_facet Susan Moore Mauroux
author_sort Susan Moore Mauroux
collection DOAJ
description The aim of this article is to explore a specific type of media programme: the weather forecast. The analysis is based on a corpus of weather forecasts for the UK, mainly from the Met Office, with five different speakers. The weather forecast is considered as a specific oral discourse type which functions within a fairly set framework involving a number of recurrent features, including a well-defined lexical field and recognizable prosodic patterns. This analysis will try to determine what these features are and how they interact. The study reveals how lexical and prosodic cues are used to connect with the target audience, enabling the forecaster to structure, highlight and even comment on information. The study aims to bring to light what our expectations are as regards the weather forecast, and how far these expectations affect our perception and even our understanding of the message.
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spelling doaj.art-40bb930722db4b61a3ea324b0688bde92024-02-14T09:08:33ZengPresses Universitaires du MidiAnglophonia1278-33312427-04662110.4000/anglophonia.755Patterns and Variation in the Weather Forecast: Can Prosodic Features be Predicted Too?Susan Moore MaurouxThe aim of this article is to explore a specific type of media programme: the weather forecast. The analysis is based on a corpus of weather forecasts for the UK, mainly from the Met Office, with five different speakers. The weather forecast is considered as a specific oral discourse type which functions within a fairly set framework involving a number of recurrent features, including a well-defined lexical field and recognizable prosodic patterns. This analysis will try to determine what these features are and how they interact. The study reveals how lexical and prosodic cues are used to connect with the target audience, enabling the forecaster to structure, highlight and even comment on information. The study aims to bring to light what our expectations are as regards the weather forecast, and how far these expectations affect our perception and even our understanding of the message.https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/755prosodyweather forecastlexiconmultimodalcomprehension
spellingShingle Susan Moore Mauroux
Patterns and Variation in the Weather Forecast: Can Prosodic Features be Predicted Too?
Anglophonia
prosody
weather forecast
lexicon
multimodal
comprehension
title Patterns and Variation in the Weather Forecast: Can Prosodic Features be Predicted Too?
title_full Patterns and Variation in the Weather Forecast: Can Prosodic Features be Predicted Too?
title_fullStr Patterns and Variation in the Weather Forecast: Can Prosodic Features be Predicted Too?
title_full_unstemmed Patterns and Variation in the Weather Forecast: Can Prosodic Features be Predicted Too?
title_short Patterns and Variation in the Weather Forecast: Can Prosodic Features be Predicted Too?
title_sort patterns and variation in the weather forecast can prosodic features be predicted too
topic prosody
weather forecast
lexicon
multimodal
comprehension
url https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/755
work_keys_str_mv AT susanmooremauroux patternsandvariationintheweatherforecastcanprosodicfeaturesbepredictedtoo