Results 151 to 160 of about 503 (174)
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2023
Stop consonants are ubiquitous among the world’s languages. These consonants are demarcated by three articulatory phases that can be targeted by sociophonetic factors: closing, hold, and release phases. In this overview, we discuss the primary acoustic and articulatory markers of each phase along with a review of studies investigating the sociophonetic
Chodroff, Eleanor, Foulkes, Paul
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Stop consonants are ubiquitous among the world’s languages. These consonants are demarcated by three articulatory phases that can be targeted by sociophonetic factors: closing, hold, and release phases. In this overview, we discuss the primary acoustic and articulatory markers of each phase along with a review of studies investigating the sociophonetic
Chodroff, Eleanor, Foulkes, Paul
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2023
Research in sociolinguistics and sociophonetics has long relied on appeals to “identity” as a means of accounting for patterns of variation in language use. Yet “identity” is a famously nebulous term, making it sometimes difficult to apply effectively as an explanatory construct. This chapter outlines some of the primary ways in which identity has been
Levon, Erez, Katsiveli, Stamatina
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Research in sociolinguistics and sociophonetics has long relied on appeals to “identity” as a means of accounting for patterns of variation in language use. Yet “identity” is a famously nebulous term, making it sometimes difficult to apply effectively as an explanatory construct. This chapter outlines some of the primary ways in which identity has been
Levon, Erez, Katsiveli, Stamatina
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Sociophonetic variation and the lemma
Journal of Phonetics, 2011Abstract This paper reports on lemma-based phonetic variation observed during a year-long sociophonetic ethnography of an all girls' high school in New Zealand. In-depth acoustic analysis was conducted on tokens of the word like from the girls' speech. This is a word with a number of different grammatical functions, such as quotative like (I was LIKE
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Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 2016
The data from this study investigate phrase-final vowel devoicing in Metropolitan French among L1 and L2 speakers, in terms of number of times a speaker devoices a phrase-final high vowel and percentage of the vowel that is devoiced. The goal is to assess whether experienced L2 speakers use style-based variation in response to the same factors as ...
Amanda Dalola, Barbara E. Bullock
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The data from this study investigate phrase-final vowel devoicing in Metropolitan French among L1 and L2 speakers, in terms of number of times a speaker devoices a phrase-final high vowel and percentage of the vowel that is devoiced. The goal is to assess whether experienced L2 speakers use style-based variation in response to the same factors as ...
Amanda Dalola, Barbara E. Bullock
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A sociolinguistic perspective on sociophonetic research
Journal of Phonetics, 2006Abstract The four papers in this issue of the journal are jointly focused on two distinct themes: sociophonetics—the study of speakers and listeners’ sensitivity to the social context in which language is produced and perceived—and exemplar theory, as a way of explaining this behavior. In these comments, I will try to relate the findings in the first
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Modelling sociophonetic variation
Journal of Phonetics, 2006Stefanie Jannedy, Jennifer Hay
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