1997
DOI: 10.1017/s0266078400009810
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Upspeak in British English

Abstract: An examination of a novel UK rising tone, with reference to its use in some other Anglophone countries

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Cited by 24 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…This was a predicted pattern for the men (assuming an analysis of HRT as an affective device), and one that is consistent with previous research (e.g. Bradford ). What is surprising, however, is the stark difference in the types of new information HRT appears with.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 90%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This was a predicted pattern for the men (assuming an analysis of HRT as an affective device), and one that is consistent with previous research (e.g. Bradford ). What is surprising, however, is the stark difference in the types of new information HRT appears with.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Building on Britain's () analysis of HRT as a positive politeness device, Bradford argues that HRT serves two functions among young women in London. First, it acts affectively as what she describes as a ‘bonding technique to promote a sense of solidarity and empathy between speakers and hearers’ (Bradford : 34). In addition, Bradford argues that it also serves a referential function, working to emphasise new or important information in discourse.…”
Section: Prior Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The other displays do not carry an overt verbalization like this, but simply the statement with the raised rising tone to indicate the simultaneous provision of information and the verification of the addressee's comprehension. Bradford's display (see Figure 14) shows the very same feature (Bradford 1997). There is no drop in pitch between the intonation units; in fact, in this case, there is a very noticeable step up in pitch from the fall of prints to the head of the following pretonic like an elephant; the tonic highway rises from this raised pitch.…”
Section: The Semogenesis Of the High Rising Terminal/tonementioning
confidence: 81%
“…It has been the subject of much investigation and debate since Ching (1982) and Guy & Vonwiller (1984), who describe the development of this intonational pattern in USA and Australia respectively. It has been reported in New Zealand (Allen 1990;Britain 1992;Britain & Newman 1992), Canada (James et al 1988;Watt 1994) and England (Bradford 1996(Bradford , 1997. It was also reported by Coupland (1988) in Wales, but not as HRT.…”
Section: The Semogenesis Of the High Rising Terminal/tonementioning
confidence: 86%
“…A discussion of upspeak in Britain can be found in Barbara Bradford's article 'Upspeak in British English' (Bradford, 1997), in which she casts doubt on the popular theory that its increased use by Britons in the 1990s was due to certain Australian television soap operas. In the early 1970s, for example, some Britons in the public eye began pronouncing involve as if it were spelled invove.…”
Section: How Might It Change?mentioning
confidence: 99%