The Tone Unit
The Tone Unit
The Tone Unit
unit
,you
The syllables underlined are the ones that carry a
tone
is it ,you
The third syllable is more prominent than the other
two and carries a rising tone. The other two syllables
will normally be much less prominent, and be said on
a level pitch.
To summarise this analysis, we would say: it is an
utterance of three syllables, composed of one toneunit; the only syllable that carries a tone is the third
one.
A syllable which carries a tone will be called a tonic
syllable. Tonic syllables have a high degree of
prominence; prominence is a property of stressed
syllables, and a tonic syllable carries a tone but also a
John is it ,you
(A fall-rise is used quite commonly in calling
someone's name out). If there is a clear pause
(silence) between John and is it ,you, then there are
two utterances, however, it is quite likely that a
speaker would say John is it ,you with no pause, so
that the four syllables would make up a single
utterance. In spite of the absence of any pause, the
utterances would normally be regarded as divided into
two tone-units: John and is it ,you .
It should be possible to see now that the tone-unit has
a place in a range of phonological units that are in a
hierarchical relationship: speech consist of a
number of utterances, each utterances consist of one
or more tone units; each tone-units consist of one or
more feet, each foot consist of one or more syllables;
each syllable consist of one or more phonemes.
The head
Consider the following one-syllable utterance:
,those
We can find the same tonic syllable in a longer utterance:
give me ,those
The rest of the tone-unit is called the head. The first syllable
has a stress mark. A head is all that part of a tone-unit that
extends from the first stressed syllable up to (but not including)
the tonic syllable. It follows that if there is no stressed syllable
before the tonic syllable, there cannot be a head. In the above
example, the first two syllables (words) are the head of the
tone-unit. In the following example, the head is the first five
syllables:
Bill called to give me ,those
The pre-head
The pre-head is composed of all the unstressed
syllables in a tone-unit preceding the first stressed
syllable. Thus pre-heads are found in two main
environments:
i) When there is not head (i.e. no stressed syllable
preceding the tonic syllable), as in the example in
an ,hour.
ii) When there is a head, as in the following example:
in a little less than an ,hour
The tail
If often happens that some syllables follow the tonic syllable.
Any syllables between the tonic syllable and the end of the
tone-unit are called the tail. In the following examples, each
tone-unit consists of an initial tonic syllable and a tail:
,look at it
,what did you say
,both of them where here
This completes the list of tone-unit components. If we use
brackets to indicate optional components, we can summarise
tone-unit structures as follows:
(pre-head) (head) tonic syllable (tail)
Or more briefly as:
(PH) (H) TS (T)
and then a a bit of a ,bay
terside
PH