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Intonation & Sentence Melody

How pitch and tone convey meaning in statements, questions, and emphasis in Spanish, English and Chinese.

Compare languages

Spanish uses phrase-level stress with limited pitch variation. English uses pitch extensively for questions, statements, and emphasis. Chinese is a tonal language where pitch is lexically fixed, but sentence intonation overlays the tones.

Examples

Yes/No question intonation

Rising intonation at end

Wh-question intonation

Falling intonation at end

Statement intonation

Falling intonation at end

Tag question intonation

Rising (real question) / falling (confirmation)

Echo question (surprise)

High pitch on wh-word

List intonation

Rising on items, falling on final

Focus/emphasis

Stress shift + pitch accent

Lexical tone

None (stress-based)

Examples

Yes/No question intonation

Rising intonation at end

Wh-question intonation

Falling intonation at end

Statement intonation

Falling intonation at end

Tag question intonation

Rising (real question) / falling (confirmation)

Echo question (surprise)

High pitch on wh-word

List intonation

Rising on non-final, falling on final

Focus/emphasis

Stress shift + pitch accent + volume

Lexical tone

None (stress-based)

Examples

Yes/No question intonation

Rising intonation at end (overlaid on lexical tones)

Wh-question intonation

Falling intonation at end

Statement intonation

Falling intonation at end

Tag question intonation

Rising or falling depending on particle ( vs ma)

Echo question (surprise)

High pitch on repeated element

List intonation

Level on items, falling on final

Focus/emphasis

Stress impossible (tones fixed); use shì or word order

Lexical tone

4 + neutral tones; pitch distinguishes meaning

Comparison at a glance

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Yes/No question intonation Rising intonation at endRising intonation at endRising intonation at end (overlaid on lexical tones)
Wh-question intonation Falling intonation at endFalling intonation at endFalling intonation at end
Statement intonation Falling intonation at endFalling intonation at endFalling intonation at end
Tag question intonation Rising (real question) / falling (confirmation)Rising (real question) / falling (confirmation)Rising or falling depending on particle ( vs ma)
Echo question (surprise) High pitch on wh-wordHigh pitch on wh-wordHigh pitch on repeated element
List intonation Rising on items, falling on finalRising on non-final, falling on finalLevel on items, falling on final
Focus/emphasis Stress shift + pitch accentStress shift + pitch accent + volumeStress impossible (tones fixed); use shì or word order
Lexical tone None (stress-based)None (stress-based)4 + neutral tones; pitch distinguishes meaning

Side-by-side comparison

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Yes/No question intonation Rising intonation at endRising intonation at endRising intonation at end (overlaid on lexical tones)
Wh-question intonation Falling intonation at endFalling intonation at endFalling intonation at end
Statement intonation Falling intonation at endFalling intonation at endFalling intonation at end
Tag question intonation Rising (real question) / falling (confirmation)Rising (real question) / falling (confirmation)Rising or falling depending on particle ( vs ma)
Echo question (surprise) High pitch on wh-wordHigh pitch on wh-wordHigh pitch on repeated element
List intonation Rising on items, falling on finalRising on non-final, falling on finalLevel on items, falling on final
Focus/emphasis Stress shift + pitch accentStress shift + pitch accent + volumeStress impossible (tones fixed); use shì or word order
Lexical tone None (stress-based)None (stress-based)4 + neutral tones; pitch distinguishes meaning

Examples in context

Yes/No question intonation

Spanish

Rising intonation at end

English

Rising intonation at end

Chinese

Rising intonation at end (overlaid on lexical tones)

Wh-question intonation

Spanish

Falling intonation at end

English

Falling intonation at end

Chinese

Falling intonation at end

Statement intonation

Spanish

Falling intonation at end

English

Falling intonation at end

Chinese

Falling intonation at end

Tag question intonation

Spanish

Rising (real question) / falling (confirmation)

English

Rising (real question) / falling (confirmation)

Chinese

Rising or falling depending on particle ( vs ma)

Echo question (surprise)

Spanish

High pitch on wh-word

English

High pitch on wh-word

Chinese

High pitch on repeated element

List intonation

Spanish

Rising on items, falling on final

English

Rising on non-final, falling on final

Chinese

Level on items, falling on final

Focus/emphasis

Spanish

Stress shift + pitch accent

English

Stress shift + pitch accent + volume

Chinese

Stress impossible (tones fixed); use shì or word order

Lexical tone

Spanish

None (stress-based)

English

None (stress-based)

Chinese

4 + neutral tones; pitch distinguishes meaning

Key Takeaways

Spanish: Uses stress accent, not lexical tone. Pitch rises at the end of yes/no questions and falls at the end of statements and wh-questions. Syllab...

English: Uses stress accent with significant pitch variation. Intonation patterns signal question type, statement type, emotion, and information stru...

Chinese: Uses lexical tones (pitch patterns on individual syllables). Sentence intonation is overlaid on top of these tones. Tonal language.

Key concepts compared: Yes/No question intonation, Wh-question intonation, Statement intonation.

Last updated: June 4, 2026