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dc.contributor.authorArrahman, Furqan
dc.date.accessioned2025-10-06T02:42:14Z
dc.date.available2025-10-06T02:42:14Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.identifier.uridspace.uii.ac.id/123456789/58022
dc.description.abstractThis study examines the stress and intonation patterns of Indonesian EFL pre-service teachers through acoustic analysis using PRAAT. Four participants read a standardized passage, The North Wind and the Sun, with their recordings compared to those of four native American English speakers from online corpora. The analysis focused on word stress, sentence stress, and intonation, using selected utterances and target words of pedagogical and prosodic relevance. Intensity, normalized duration, and semitone-based pitch were extracted, with normalization applied for gender and speech rate differences. Findings show that while EFL speakers marked stress on key content words, their prominence cues were less consistent and more limited in range than those of native speakers. Intonation contours were also flatter, suggesting influence from L1 prosody and limited instructional exposure. The results underscore the need for targeted suprasegmental training and highlight Praat’s value in pronunciation research.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherUniversitas Islam Indonesiaen_US
dc.subjectAcoustic Analysisen_US
dc.subjectEFLen_US
dc.subjectIntonationen_US
dc.subjectPraaten_US
dc.subjectSentence Stressen_US
dc.subjectSuprasegmentalsen_US
dc.subjectTeachersen_US
dc.subjectWord Stressen_US
dc.titleA Comparative Analysis of Stress and Intonation Between Indonesian EFL Pre-service Teachers and Native English Speakersen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US
dc.Identifier.NIM18322140


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