Abstract

In an empirical study participants were asked to rate the perceived degree of certainty of utterances that contained either the modal would or main verb be (e.g. That would be me vs. That’s me), and which were also variously produced with one of three intonational contours (downstepped, declarative, and yes-noquestion). We found that both downstepped contour and epistemic would made a signicant and independent contribution to the assessment of speaker certainty. That is, participants rated utterances with the downstepped contour as most certain, followed by those with the declarative contour, while the yes-noquestion contour was perceived as highly uncertain. Similarly, participants rated speakers’ responses with epistemic would as signicantly more certain than those without it.

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