Results 111 to 120 of about 914 (205)
A Notice on Lenition and Hardening
Abstract This article provides the edition and the translation of a short anonymous treatise about Syriac bgādkpāt and written in Garšuni, the "Notice on Lenition and Hardening," which is preserved in MS Berlin, Staatsbibliothek, Sachau 196.
openaire +1 more source
Towards quantifying lenition in Ondarroan Basque [PDF]
This study investigates lenition of intervocalic /b d g/ in Ondarroan Basque. Previous work has suggested that intervocalic voiced stops in Spanish and other languages are produced with varying degrees of voicing, fricativization, or approximation. Based
Saadah, Eman
core
The Effect of Contextual Consonants on Voiced Stop Lenition: Evidence from Catalan [PDF]
This study uses acoustic energy measures for /b, d, g/ after /f, s, ʃ, l, r/ in Catalan in order to test whether postconsonantal voiced stop lenition is ruled by minimization of articulatory effort, acoustico-perceptual continuity of an ongoing prosodic ...
Daniel Recasens
core
Hierarchical Inference in Sound Change: Words, Sounds, and Frequency of Use. [PDF]
Kapatsinski V.
europepmc +1 more source
Liverpool English (LE) is the variety of English spoken in Liverpool and much of the surrounding county of Merseyside, in the north-west of England. After London, the north-west of England is the most densely populated of all regions in England and Wales,
Watson, Kevin
core
Articulatory effects on perceptions of men's status and attractiveness. [PDF]
Karthikeyan S +11 more
europepmc +1 more source
Review of Brandão de Carvalho, Joaquim, Tobias Scheer and Philippe Ségéral (eds.). 2008. Lenition and fortition. [PDF]
Review of Brandão de Carvalho, Joaquim, Tobias Scheer and Philippe Ségéral (eds.). 2008.
Kul, Małgorzata, Jaworski, Sylwester
core
A Look at Diachronic Phonological Processes in Inthii Oy
This study examines phonological processes from a diachronic view in the understudied West Bahnaric language Oy, Inthii village variety, Attapeu Province, Lao PDR.
Jennifer L. Daniell
doaj
Glottal stops do not constrain lexical access as do oral stops. [PDF]
Mitterer H, Kim S, Cho T.
europepmc +1 more source

