JoREL: Journal of Religion and Linguistics
Vol. 2 No. 2 (2025): JoREL: Journal of Religion and Linguistics

Intonation in a glossolalic corpus: Biological and communicative factors

De Dominicis, Amedeo (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
15 Sep 2025

Abstract

This study investigates the suprasegmental properties of glossolalic speech, particularly focusing on intonation patterns observed in a corpus (15 recordings) of glossolalic prayers recorded by 11 native German speakers. Glossolalia, often interpreted as divinely inspired speech, lacks semantic content but exhibits structured phonetic features. An earlier analysis conducted by the corpus owners revealed that glossolalic syllables, although meaningless, follow frequency patterns similar to those of the speakers’ native language. The present study analyzes intonation using the Prosogram script available in Praat, and the results show that the melodic contours primarily follow a falling–falling pattern within breath groups, suggesting a physiological, rather than communicative, origin. This downward F0 trend is interpreted through the lens of Gussenhoven’s biological codes, emphasizing the dominance and finality encoded in such patterns. The corpus was recorded in semi-spontaneous conditions, which is particularly rare in the case of glossolalic speech. The approach adopted in the paper is innovative: it uses a spectrographic and intonation analysis but combines the results with a pragmatic investigation on the communicative intentions of the speakers. Glossolalia is interpreted not as a prayer, but as the imitation of a non-human, divine language.

Copyrights © 2025






Journal Info

Abbrev

jorel

Publisher

Subject

Religion Arts Humanities Languange, Linguistic, Communication & Media

Description

JoREL: Journal of Religion and Linguistics is an open access international, peer reviewed journal publishing high quality, original research that advance civic understanding and dialogue on issues at the intersections of religion and linguistics in public life. Editorial team broadly define religion ...