We present a preliminary investigation on the usefulness of prosodic boundaries for unsupervised term discovery (UTD). Studies in language acquisition show that infants use prosodic boundaries to segment continuous speech into word-like units. We evaluate whether such a strategy could also help UTD algorithms. Running a previously published UTD algorithm (MODIS) on a corpus of prosodically annotated English broadcast news revealed that many discovered terms straddle prosodic boundaries. We then implemented two variants of this algorithm: one that discards straddling items and one that truncates them to the nearest boundary (either prosodic or pause marker). Both algorithms showed a better term matching F-score compared to the baseline and higher level prosodic boundaries were found to be better than lower level boundaries or pause markers. In addition, we observed that the truncation algorithm, but not the discard algorithm, increased word boundary F-score over the baseline.