- (intonācijas or more
specifically zilbes intonācijas)
either stiepta ("level"),
lauzta ("broken") or krītoša ("falling")
indicated by
Latvian linguists with a...
- A
similar phenomenon,
known as "broken tone"[citation needed] (Latvian:
lauztā intonācija, Latgalian:
lauztuo intonaceja)
exists in
several other languages...
- rise
followed by a long fall e.g., loks [ˋluɔ̯ks] ('arch')
broken tone (
lauztā intonācija)
rising tone
followed by
falling tone with
interruption in the...
- (Stories from Kikurags, 1965),
Nelaime mājās (Misfortune at Home, 1979),
Lauztā sirds uz goda dēļa (Broken
Heart on the
Board of Honour, 1997).
During the...
- dialects. There, the
acute register is
directly continued as a
broken tone (
lauztā) in
originally unstressed syllables,
marked with a cir****flex diacritic:...