Karlsson, A. (2014). Intonation in Khalkha Mongolian. Journal of the International Phonetic Association , 44(1), 45–67.
Roberts, C. (2012). Information structure in discourse. In C. Maienborn et al. (Eds.), Semantics: An international handbook of natural language meaning (Vol. 3, pp. 2509–2536). De Gruyter. Focus Mongol Heleer
: Bi nom unsh-sun [nom focused, -iig dropped] I book read-PAST ‘I read a BOOK’ (not a magazine) Karlsson, A
Author: [Generated for academic purposes] Affiliation: Institute of Linguistics and Altaic Studies Date: April 15, 2026 Abstract This paper investigates the grammatical and prosodic strategies used to encode information focus in the Heleer variety of Mongolian, a colloquial register spoken in central and eastern Mongolia. While standard Mongolian (Khalkha) utilizes word order variations, focus particles (e.g., l , ch ), and intonational prominence, Heleer exhibits unique reductions in case marking and increased reliance on prosodic highlighting. Using corpus data from spontaneous speech and controlled elicitation tasks with 20 native speakers, this study identifies three primary focus-marking devices: (1) preverbal placement of focused constituents, (2) use of the clitic =l as an exhaustive focus marker, and (3) a distinctive L+H* pitch accent on the focused word. The findings suggest that Heleer represents an intermediate stage between rigid SOV focus structure and more discourse-configurational systems, with implications for Altaic typology. Journal of the International Phonetic Association , 44(1),