What is missing to confirm a typology of rhythm? : theoretical observations and a preliminary application to two Greek varieties

Since 1940, numerous eff orts have been made to either verify or refute the hypothesis of a rhythm typology, yet no defi nitive conclusions have been reached. In this paper, I discuss the limitations of the reliability of data collection and processing methods, as well as the indices that dominate t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Michail I. Marinis
Format: Article
Language:ces
Published: Czech Society for Modern Greek Studies 2024-12-01
Series:Neograeca Bohemica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.phil.muni.cz/neograeca-bohemica/article/view/40602
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849735671611129856
author Michail I. Marinis
author_facet Michail I. Marinis
author_sort Michail I. Marinis
collection DOAJ
description Since 1940, numerous eff orts have been made to either verify or refute the hypothesis of a rhythm typology, yet no defi nitive conclusions have been reached. In this paper, I discuss the limitations of the reliability of data collection and processing methods, as well as the indices that dominate the attempts to measure the phenomenon, highlighting the obstacles to creating a rhythm typology. To highlight the issues under discussion, I conduct a test application of the frameworks from international literature on two varieties of the Greek language, the Amaliada variety and Cypriot Greek, based on the analysis of 192 intonational phrases, which were systematically and randomly selected from recordings of unscripted natural speech by two female speakers for each linguistic system. The analysis demonstrates such variability among speakers of the same dialect that it calls into question the validity of the rhythm measurement practices used to date. I propose the key pillars upon which rhythm research should be based in order to draw reliable conclusions and obtain cross-linguistically and inter-study comparable results, aiming to reach a defi nitive confirmation or refutation of a rhythm typology.
format Article
id doaj-art-5fe9d70efd6345909d28dd77a0f45db6
institution DOAJ
issn 1803-6414
2694-913X
language ces
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Czech Society for Modern Greek Studies
record_format Article
series Neograeca Bohemica
spelling doaj-art-5fe9d70efd6345909d28dd77a0f45db62025-08-20T03:07:31ZcesCzech Society for Modern Greek StudiesNeograeca Bohemica1803-64142694-913X2024-12-012410.5817/NGB2024-24-5What is missing to confirm a typology of rhythm? : theoretical observations and a preliminary application to two Greek varietiesMichail I. MarinisSince 1940, numerous eff orts have been made to either verify or refute the hypothesis of a rhythm typology, yet no defi nitive conclusions have been reached. In this paper, I discuss the limitations of the reliability of data collection and processing methods, as well as the indices that dominate the attempts to measure the phenomenon, highlighting the obstacles to creating a rhythm typology. To highlight the issues under discussion, I conduct a test application of the frameworks from international literature on two varieties of the Greek language, the Amaliada variety and Cypriot Greek, based on the analysis of 192 intonational phrases, which were systematically and randomly selected from recordings of unscripted natural speech by two female speakers for each linguistic system. The analysis demonstrates such variability among speakers of the same dialect that it calls into question the validity of the rhythm measurement practices used to date. I propose the key pillars upon which rhythm research should be based in order to draw reliable conclusions and obtain cross-linguistically and inter-study comparable results, aiming to reach a defi nitive confirmation or refutation of a rhythm typology.https://journals.phil.muni.cz/neograeca-bohemica/article/view/40602phonological typologyrhythm classesstress-timed languagessyllable-timed languagesModern Greek dialectslinguistic variety
spellingShingle Michail I. Marinis
What is missing to confirm a typology of rhythm? : theoretical observations and a preliminary application to two Greek varieties
Neograeca Bohemica
phonological typology
rhythm classes
stress-timed languages
syllable-timed languages
Modern Greek dialects
linguistic variety
title What is missing to confirm a typology of rhythm? : theoretical observations and a preliminary application to two Greek varieties
title_full What is missing to confirm a typology of rhythm? : theoretical observations and a preliminary application to two Greek varieties
title_fullStr What is missing to confirm a typology of rhythm? : theoretical observations and a preliminary application to two Greek varieties
title_full_unstemmed What is missing to confirm a typology of rhythm? : theoretical observations and a preliminary application to two Greek varieties
title_short What is missing to confirm a typology of rhythm? : theoretical observations and a preliminary application to two Greek varieties
title_sort what is missing to confirm a typology of rhythm theoretical observations and a preliminary application to two greek varieties
topic phonological typology
rhythm classes
stress-timed languages
syllable-timed languages
Modern Greek dialects
linguistic variety
url https://journals.phil.muni.cz/neograeca-bohemica/article/view/40602
work_keys_str_mv AT michailimarinis whatismissingtoconfirmatypologyofrhythmtheoreticalobservationsandapreliminaryapplicationtotwogreekvarieties