Pitch reset
ꜛ
In speech, phonetic pitch reset occurs at the boundaries (pausa) between prosodic units.
Over the course of such units, the median pitch of the voice declines from its initial value, sometimes reaching the lower end of the speaker's vocal range. Then, it must reset to a higher level if the person is to continue speaking. In non-tonal languages, the sudden increase in pitch is one of the principal auditory cues to the start of a new prosodic unit.
In register tone languages which experience discrete downdrift, pitch reset is required as the tones approach the lower end of the speaker's comfort range, and in those languages which experience tone terracing, it is in addition required in order to maintain the tonal distinctions of the language.
See also
- Upstep
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- Syllable
- Mora
- Metrical foot
- Vowel reduction
- Tone contour
- Pitch accent
- Register
- Downstep
- Upstep
- Downdrift
- Tone terracing
- Floating tone
- Tone sandhi
- Tone letter
- Secondary stress
- Vowel reduction
- Accent
- Intonation (pitch)
- Pitch contour
- Pitch reset
- Stress
- Rhythm
- Loudness
- Prosodic unit
- Pausa
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