Echoes of past contact: Venetian influence on Cretan Greek intonation

Prosodic aspects of cross-linguistic contact are under-researched, especially past contact that has subsequently ceased. In this paper, we investigate declarative and polar question tunes of contemporary Cretan Greek, a regional variety of Greek whose speakers were in contact with Venetian speakers...

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Main Authors: Baltazani, M, Coleman, J, Passoni, E, Przedlacka, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publications 2022
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author Baltazani, M
Coleman, J
Passoni, E
Przedlacka, J
author_facet Baltazani, M
Coleman, J
Passoni, E
Przedlacka, J
author_sort Baltazani, M
collection OXFORD
description Prosodic aspects of cross-linguistic contact are under-researched, especially past contact that has subsequently ceased. In this paper, we investigate declarative and polar question tunes of contemporary Cretan Greek, a regional variety of Greek whose speakers were in contact with Venetian speakers during the four and half centuries of Venetian rule on the island, from 1204 to 1669. The F0 contours of the Cretan tunes and alignment of peaks and troughs of interest with the nuclear vowel are compared to the corresponding tunes in Venetian dialect and Venetian Italian and to those in Athenian (Standard) Greek, which are used as control. The data (1610 declarative utterances and 698 polar questions) were drawn from natural speech corpora based on pragmatic criteria: broad focus for declaratives, broad focus, and information-seeking interpretation for polar questions. The pitch contour shapes of the tunes are modeled using polynomial basis functions, and the F0 alignment points are determined analytically. The results show the robustness of contact effects almost three and a half centuries after regular contact ceased and indicate that the shapes of the F0 contours of Cretan and Venetian declarative and polar question tunes are similar. In addition, Cretan alignment patterns are similar to Venetian and significantly different from Athenian. Insights are gained from research into how long prosodic characteristics may persist in a recipient language—decades or even centuries after the cessation of contact.
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spelling oxford-uuid:2d5c8bea-abe2-413f-980a-56e6ddfb01fc2024-08-15T10:07:19ZEchoes of past contact: Venetian influence on Cretan Greek intonationJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:2d5c8bea-abe2-413f-980a-56e6ddfb01fcEnglishSymplectic ElementsSAGE Publications2022Baltazani, MColeman, JPassoni, EPrzedlacka, JProsodic aspects of cross-linguistic contact are under-researched, especially past contact that has subsequently ceased. In this paper, we investigate declarative and polar question tunes of contemporary Cretan Greek, a regional variety of Greek whose speakers were in contact with Venetian speakers during the four and half centuries of Venetian rule on the island, from 1204 to 1669. The F0 contours of the Cretan tunes and alignment of peaks and troughs of interest with the nuclear vowel are compared to the corresponding tunes in Venetian dialect and Venetian Italian and to those in Athenian (Standard) Greek, which are used as control. The data (1610 declarative utterances and 698 polar questions) were drawn from natural speech corpora based on pragmatic criteria: broad focus for declaratives, broad focus, and information-seeking interpretation for polar questions. The pitch contour shapes of the tunes are modeled using polynomial basis functions, and the F0 alignment points are determined analytically. The results show the robustness of contact effects almost three and a half centuries after regular contact ceased and indicate that the shapes of the F0 contours of Cretan and Venetian declarative and polar question tunes are similar. In addition, Cretan alignment patterns are similar to Venetian and significantly different from Athenian. Insights are gained from research into how long prosodic characteristics may persist in a recipient language—decades or even centuries after the cessation of contact.
spellingShingle Baltazani, M
Coleman, J
Passoni, E
Przedlacka, J
Echoes of past contact: Venetian influence on Cretan Greek intonation
title Echoes of past contact: Venetian influence on Cretan Greek intonation
title_full Echoes of past contact: Venetian influence on Cretan Greek intonation
title_fullStr Echoes of past contact: Venetian influence on Cretan Greek intonation
title_full_unstemmed Echoes of past contact: Venetian influence on Cretan Greek intonation
title_short Echoes of past contact: Venetian influence on Cretan Greek intonation
title_sort echoes of past contact venetian influence on cretan greek intonation
work_keys_str_mv AT baltazanim echoesofpastcontactvenetianinfluenceoncretangreekintonation
AT colemanj echoesofpastcontactvenetianinfluenceoncretangreekintonation
AT passonie echoesofpastcontactvenetianinfluenceoncretangreekintonation
AT przedlackaj echoesofpastcontactvenetianinfluenceoncretangreekintonation