Results 101 to 110 of about 939 (118)
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A diachronic perspective on ‘prosodies’ in Central Chadic languages (Afroasiatic)
Journal of African Languages and LinguisticsThe paper reports on generalisations drawn from the author’s historical analysis of a sample of some five thousand words, which reflect more than two hundred lexical items from up to sixty-six Central Chadic languages and language varieties.
H. Wolff
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Glottalisation as a cue to coda consonant voicing in Australian English: a change in progress
2022Although the presence of glottalisation has long been noted in other varieties of English, its presence has only been described recently for Australian English (AusE) and it remains an under‐researched phenomenon in this variety. We report on an apparen ttime study designed to examine glottalisation as a cue to coda stop voicing in AusE and to ...
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2016
Short abstract: The aim of the present study is to investigate word-final /r/ and word-initial glottalisation in English-accented German and in English in relationship to phrasing and focus. This is the first study on the interplay between external sandhi and glottalisation in relationship to prosodic structure, comparing native and non-native language,
Maria Paola Bissiri, James M. Scobbie
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Short abstract: The aim of the present study is to investigate word-final /r/ and word-initial glottalisation in English-accented German and in English in relationship to phrasing and focus. This is the first study on the interplay between external sandhi and glottalisation in relationship to prosodic structure, comparing native and non-native language,
Maria Paola Bissiri, James M. Scobbie
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Spreading everwhere?: How Recent a Phenomenon is Glottalisation in Received Pronunciation?
, 1996B. Collins, I. Mees
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2016
We present an ongoing study which investigates the interplay between external sandhi – specifically word-final /r/ – and word-initial glottalisation in English-accented German compared to native English in relationship to accent and phrasing. In Southern British English word-final /r/ is usually not articulated, but it can surface if the following word
Maria Paola Bissiri, James M. Scobbie
openaire +1 more source
We present an ongoing study which investigates the interplay between external sandhi – specifically word-final /r/ – and word-initial glottalisation in English-accented German compared to native English in relationship to accent and phrasing. In Southern British English word-final /r/ is usually not articulated, but it can surface if the following word
Maria Paola Bissiri, James M. Scobbie
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Nasalisation in English: phonology or phonetics
Phonology, 1993A. Cohn
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Descriptive adequacy in phonology: a variationist perspective
Journal of Linguistics, 1997G. Docherty +4 more
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Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 2013
O. Gordeeva, J. Scobbie
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O. Gordeeva, J. Scobbie
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