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stemintonatie

Stemintonatie is a term used in linguistics to describe the intonation patterns of the human voice in spoken language. It refers to the rise and fall of pitch across an utterance and how these pitch movements contribute to meaning beyond the literal words. Stemintonatie encompasses the overall melodic contour of speech, including where pitch accents, phrase accents, and boundary tones occur, and how they interact with syntactic structure and discourse.

In practice, stemintonatie is analyzed in terms of its functional components. Pitch accents mark new or important

Methods used to study stemintonatie combine acoustic measurement with transcriptions. Analysts extract features such as fundamental

See also prosody, intonation, ToBI, pitch accent, boundary tone.

information,
boundary
tones
signal
whether
an
utterance
is
declarative,
question,
or
exclamative,
and
phrasing
reflects
the
grouping
of
words
into
prosodic
units.
Different
languages
and
dialects
exhibit
distinct
patterns
of
stemintonatie,
although
many
share
universal
tendencies
such
as
rising
or
falling
final
tones
to
indicate
questions
or
statements.
In
Dutch-language
research,
stemintonatie
is
often
studied
alongside
other
prosodic
phenomena
to
understand
how
prosody
conveys
focus,
stance,
and
discourse
relations.
frequency
(F0)
contours,
pitch
range,
and
alignment
of
tonal
targets
to
syllables
or
words.
Transcription
schemes
like
ToBI-based
systems
are
commonly
applied
to
label
tones
and
accents,
enabling
cross-linguistic
comparison
and
computational
modeling.
Applications
of
stemintonatie
research
include
speech
synthesis
and
recognition,
language
teaching,
and
forensic
phonetics,
where
accurate
modeling
of
intonation
improves
intelligibility
and
speaker
characterization.