Results 211 to 220 of about 2,282 (245)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
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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2023
The chapter presents the main questions in the field of French sociophonetics, taking into account the most important studies on the different factors influencing phonetic variation, from traditional dialectology to current research about heterogeneity in French pronunciation.
Nardy, Aurélie, Candea, Maria
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The chapter presents the main questions in the field of French sociophonetics, taking into account the most important studies on the different factors influencing phonetic variation, from traditional dialectology to current research about heterogeneity in French pronunciation.
Nardy, Aurélie, Candea, Maria
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Sociophonetics, semantics, and intention
Journal of Linguistics, 2022Kathryn Campbell-Kibler observes that the role of speaker intention seems to differ in the meanings of primary interest in variationist sociolinguistics on one hand and semantics and pragmatics on the other. Taking this observation as its point of departure, the central goal of the present work is to clarify the nature of intention-attribution in ...
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2023
Laterals are the L-like sounds of the world’s languages, notable for displaying both consonant- like and vowel-like properties. From the Latin `lateralis' (literally ‘belonging to the side’), laterals have closure at a point in the center of the oral tract (like a consonant) as well as the continuation of airflow down one or both sides of the tongue ...
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Laterals are the L-like sounds of the world’s languages, notable for displaying both consonant- like and vowel-like properties. From the Latin `lateralis' (literally ‘belonging to the side’), laterals have closure at a point in the center of the oral tract (like a consonant) as well as the continuation of airflow down one or both sides of the tongue ...
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Brill’s Journal of Afroasiatic Languages and Linguistics, 2019
Abstract This paper surveys current research on the sociophonetics of Modern Hebrew, meaning the research of phonetic variation in Hebrew speech that is socially conditioned, or interpreted as socially meaningful. The paper discusses recent methodological and theoretical advances in sociophonetic research on production and perception, and ...
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Abstract This paper surveys current research on the sociophonetics of Modern Hebrew, meaning the research of phonetic variation in Hebrew speech that is socially conditioned, or interpreted as socially meaningful. The paper discusses recent methodological and theoretical advances in sociophonetic research on production and perception, and ...
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Acquisition of sociophonetic variation
Revista Española de Lingüística Aplicada/Spanish Journal of Applied Linguistics, 2018Abstract This study investigates the acquisition of nativelike variation in the production of Spanish /d/ by English-speaking learners. Specifically, we examine the production of /d/ in word-internal intervocalic position in the speech of 13 highly advanced nonnative speakers (NNSs) and 13 native speakers (NSs) of Spanish in digitally ...
Megan Solon +2 more
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Dialectology meets sociophonetics
2019This article analyzes the social perceptions of ceceo and distinción in the town of Lepe, Spain using a matched-guise experiment created by digitally manipulating spontaneous speech from twelve speakers, varying only in realizations of syllable initial coronal fricatives.
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Sociophonetics of Consonantal Variation
Annual Review of Linguistics, 2016Although consonantal variation has traditionally been studied using auditory coding, techniques now exist for measuring any kind of consonants acoustically and/or articulatorily. These methods have already been employed extensively for studying variation in many languages.
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