Acoustical analyses of the fundamental frequency (F-o) contours of neutrally spoken Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) speech types of declarative, imperative, exclamative, and interrogative nature showed that their pitch patterns are characterized by four attributes: fluctuations around a mean pitch value that lies along either a declining or a constant line, a narrowing dynamic pitch range, an isochrony period between successive accented syllables, and a two-phase pitch rise in case of certain interrogatives. As such the intonation patterns of Arabic speech are mathematically modeled and specified by parameters, which were obtained from natural Fo contours. Using the intonation model, continuous synthesized intonation curves were generated that resemble natural intonation patterns. Intonation synthesis has applications in speech synthesis as it can be used to give natural flavor to artificially produced speech. Thus the synthesized intonation curves were imposed on synthesized speech of the types considered, and subjective perceptual tests using mean opinion scores (MOS) revealed that synthesized speech produced with synthesized intonation is perceptually of comparable naturalness to synthesized speech produced with natural intonation. (c) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.