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prosody 393<br />

meat was eaten by the cat, and so on), and how a single linguistic form can be<br />

analysed in terms of several propositions (e.g. Those nice red apples cost a lot<br />

expresses the propositions that ‘the apples cost a lot’, ‘the apples are nice’ and<br />

‘the apples are red’). The notion of ‘proposition’ is fundamental to case grammar,<br />

where it is used as one of the two main underlying constituents of<br />

sentences (Sentence ⇒ Modality+Proposition): each proposition is analysed in<br />

terms of a predicate word and its associated arguments (i.e. case roles). Also of<br />

interest is the distinction to be made between the propositional meaning of a<br />

sentence on the one hand, and the use made of the sentence (e.g. in various<br />

speech-act situations) on the other. Linguists are not primarily concerned with<br />

the evaluation of a proposition in terms of truth-values, nor with the question<br />

of the referential or cognitive status of the notion. See also analytic (2), ideational,<br />

synthetic (2).<br />

propositional attitude A term used in philosophy, and often encountered in<br />

semantic theory, for mental attitudes such as belief, hope, doubt, etc. Such<br />

attitudes are commonly analysed as relations which an individual may stand in<br />

to a proposition. The semantic analysis of verbs representing propositional<br />

attitudes has played a central role in the discussion of intensionality (see intension<br />

(2)).<br />

propositional calculus<br />

see proposition<br />

proscriptive (adj.) A term used by linguists to characterize any approach<br />

which attempts to lay down rules of correctness, emphasizing how language<br />

should not be used. For example, the view that ‘sentences should not<br />

end with prepositions’ is a ‘proscriptive rule’. These normative statements<br />

are usually made within the overall context of a prescriptive grammar.<br />

prosodeme (n.)<br />

see prosody<br />

prosodic bootstrapping<br />

see bootstrapping<br />

prosodic phonology<br />

see prosody<br />

prosody (n.) A term used in suprasegmental phonetics and phonology to<br />

refer collectively to variations in pitch, loudness, tempo and rhythm. Sometimes<br />

it is used loosely as a synonym for ‘suprasegmental’, but in a narrower<br />

sense it refers only to the above variables, the remaining suprasegmental features<br />

being labelled paralinguistic. The narrow sense is close to the traditional use<br />

of the term ‘prosody’, where it referred to the characteristics and analyses of<br />

verse structure. The term prosodic features is preferred in linguistics, partly<br />

to enable a distinction to be drawn with the traditional use. In some approaches<br />

to phonology, the term sentence prosody is used to group together intonation,<br />

phrasal rhythmic patterning and more general features of prosodic phrasing.<br />

The above use treats ‘prosody’ as a mass noun.<br />

In the theory of phonology proposed by J. R. Firth (prosodic phonology),<br />

prosody is treated as a count noun, and given special status (see Firthian). It is<br />

distinguished in this approach from phonematic unit: the latter is a segmental

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