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Modeling Item-Level Spelling Variance in Adults: Providing Further Insights into Lexical Quality. [PDF]

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Rigobon VM   +6 more
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The status of schwa in Indonesian

Linguistik Aktuell, 2018
Cross-linguistically, the distribution of schwa is often different from other vowels. This is the case in Indonesian: While contrastive, schwa’s distribution is more restricted than the other vowels and the realization of schwa is variable. Most prior work on schwa in Indonesian has focused on Standard Indonesian; however as a formal standard, there ...
Abigaïl C Cohn
exaly   +2 more sources

Schwa vs. Schwa + /r/ in German

Phonetica, 1995
Abstract German has two functionally distinctive vowels that only occur in unstressed position, one being schwa, the other stemming from schwa + vocalized /r/. Although traditionally acknowledged, with an established IPA symbolic representation [e] vs.
openaire   +1 more source

The Influence of Rhythmic Context on Schwa Epenthesis and Schwa Deletion in Dutch

Language and Speech, 1998
Schwa epenthesis and schwa deletion are two types of phonological variation which frequently occur in Dutch. These phonological variations are optional since speakers are free to insert or delete a schwa. A series of picture naming experiments investigated whether schwa epenthesis and schwa deletion are arbitrary processes or whether they are ...
Cecile Kuijpers, Wilma van Donselaar
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What’s in a Schwa?

Phonetica, 1994
Abstract Although the schwa sound is by far the most frequent vowel in Dutch, it has up to now been phonetically the most neglected. We used an existing database of vowel sounds from focus words in spontaneous speech and in lexically the same text, read aloud by one male speaker, to analyse durational and spectral characteristics of ...
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Schwa in Berber

Lingua, 1985
This paper attempts a new analysis of the complex problem of the behavior and representation of the schwa vowel in Berber. The analysis, which tries to remedy the shortcomings of the previous studies in this area, relies on a theory of syllable structure (first sketched in work by Halle and Vergnaud (1980) ) in which phonological segments are ...
openaire   +1 more source

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