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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 Jun 30.
Published in final edited form as: Folia Phoniatr Logop. 2013 May 28;65(1):3–19. doi: 10.1159/000350030

Table 2.

Cues of rhythm used for segmenting word and syllable boundaries

Language Timing class Cues for segmentation
English stress duration
loudness
F0 variation
vowel quality
Dutch stress suprasegmental cues to stress
vowel quality (less salient distinction than in English) [87]
pitch movement cues [47]
Finnish stress vowel harmony [88]
durational contrast of stressed vowel
German stress final-syllable lengthening (regardless of stress) [1]
Swedish stress word accent fall (F0, duration, loudness) [89]
sentence accent rise
French syllable durational contrast of consonants [90]
Spanish syllable fine-tuned discrimination to final lengthening [20]
stress placement
Cantonese syllable different silent pause intervals [91]
Mandarin mixed [syllable and mora (tone)] lexical tone, determined by F0 height and F0 contour
tone duration, relative to sentence position
Brazilian Portuguese mixed (mora and syllable) [92] reduced vowels in unstressed position
simplified consonant clusters
rate-dependent changes in durational contrasts
Japanese mora (tone) subsyllabic segmentation [92]

F0 = Fundamental frequency.