The rise and fall of the intensity of a voice is called "prosody".
Intonation, fluctuation of the pitch of the voice
It is called cadence.
The rise and fall of the voice is known as intonation. Intonation involves variations in pitch and tone that can convey meaning and emotion in spoken language.
The rise and fall of spoken and written voice is tone or intonation. We learn to apply intonation to reading from the speech we hear and our interactions with others.
Rise in intonation refers to a rise in pitch at the end of a sentence, often indicating a question or uncertainty. Fall in intonation refers to a lowering of pitch at the end of a sentence, typically indicating a statement or completion. It is a key aspect of how we convey meaning and emotion in spoken language.
The four types of intonation in English are falling intonation, rising intonation, fall-rise intonation, and rise-fall intonation. Falling intonation is when the pitch of the voice falls at the end of a sentence, indicating finality. Rising intonation is when the pitch of the voice rises at the end of a sentence, indicating a question. Fall-rise intonation is a combination of falling and rising pitch within a sentence, often used in expressing uncertainty or surprise. Rise-fall intonation is when the pitch rises and then falls at the end of a sentence, indicating disbelief or disappointment.
It does not rise or fall. It is an imaginary line.
Fall is the height of a slanted or diagonal straight surface. Gradient is the result of rise divided by fall (rise/fall) (rise over fall)
Intonation is the rise and fall of sounds within the voice while speaking or in music. It is important to convey different stresses and meaning to the listener.
The three voice qualities are: stress, pitch, and juncture. Stress is vocal emphasis on a spoken word or part of a word, pitch is stress produced by the rise and fall of the voice, and juncture is a pause between sounds or words.
The rise and fall is the tides.
Jim Cartwright has written: 'The rise and fall of Little Voice : a drama in two acts' 'Hard fruit' 'Plays 1'