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Oral–laryngeal timing in glottalised resonants

Journal of Phonetics, 2008
Abstract Although previous studies of intergestural timing in multi-gesture segments have identified some consistent patterns, fundamental questions remain about the underlying causes of these patterns. Hypotheses based on universal perceptual or biomechanical restrictions have proven difficult to test because of confounding factors, e.g.
Sonya Bird   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Opening or Closing? An Electroglottographic Analysis of Voiceless Coda Consonants in Australian English

Interspeech, 2023
In voiceless sounds, the glottis may be spread or constricted. Glottal spreading is associated with breathiness, and constriction with glottalisation.
Louise Ratko   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Glottalic and pitch features in Chepang and Bhujel

Linguistics of the TIbeto-Burman Area, 2022
This paper looks at two closely related Tibeto-Burman languages of Nepal, Chepang and Bhujel, in relation to certain supra-segmental features they possess which are involved in the distinction of minimal pairs.
R. C. Caughley
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Exploration of Welsh English Pre-Aspiration: How Wide-Spread is it?

Interspeech, 2021
This study investigates how widespread pre-aspiration and local breathiness are in English spoken in Wales, by speakers identifying as Welsh. While the main purpose is to establish whether the phenomenon is generally present in Welsh English, the data ...
Míša Hejná
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Glottalisation in Scottish Gaelic

2021
This thesis is dedicated to glottalisation in Scottish Gaelic, recorded in various south-western dialects. Glottalisation has been reported to occur, optionally or inconsistently, between a stressed short vowel and another vowel, in hiatus or with an intervening consonant, but not in svarabhakti groups. Less commonly, it is found in other contexts, for
openaire   +2 more sources

Secondary glottalisation in Central Chadic (Afroasiatic)

Studies in African Linguistics
Continued in-depth historical-comparative research into Central Chadic phonology reveals that present-day Central Chadic languages possess a number of phonemes that cannot be reconstructed for Proto-Central Chadic.
E. Wolff
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The production and perception of coda glottalisation in Australian English

2022
Previous research suggests that glottalisation is a cue to voiceless coda stops in Australian English and may be a recent change to the variety. In this thesis, we examine glottalisation in production and perception by Australian English speaker/listeners. We first consider coda glottalisation in the production of unstressed syllables, with the results
openaire   +1 more source

Correlations in Frequency of Coda Voiceless Stop Variants with Phonological and Stylistic Factors in Vietnamese-Accented English

Pázmány Papers – Journal of Languages and Cultures
This study investigates how Vietnamese-accented English speakers articulate coda voiceless plosives (/p, t, k/), influenced by L1 phonology and sociolinguistic factors.
Dao Thi Anh Pham
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Development of *#wo, *#wu in Lower Sorbian: Phonetics and Phonology1

Scando-Slavica
In Lower Sorbian, morpheme-initial /w/ in front of was affected by a weakening to [h] and, eventually, to zero. Consequently, an optional pronunciation with the glottal stop in place of the original [w] emerged.
Lechosław Jocz
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Phonetic Variants of Response Particles o and a in Mandarin Conversations: The Role of Nasalization and Glottalization in Interaction

East Asian Pragmatics
Response particles have been recognised as highly variable in terms of both form and function. It is particularly so for particle-rich languages like Mandarin Chinese, where multiple phonetic variants of a particle can be observed. A question that arises
Wei Wang
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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