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Modeling Global Syntactic Variation in English Using Dialect Classification
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Dunn J. - : Association for Computational Linguistics, 2019
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Finding variants for construction-based dialectometry: A corpus-based approach to regional CxGs
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Dunn J. - : Walter de Gruyter GmbH, 2019
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Non-metallic ultrasound probe holder for co-collection and co-registration with EMA
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Testing claims of a usage-based phonology with Liverpool English t-to-r
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Clark, L.; Watson, K.. - : University of Canterbury. School of Languages Cultures and Linguistics, 2011. : University of Canterbury. Linguistics, 2011
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Positioning in Media Dialogue: Negotiating Roles in the News Interview by Elda Weizman
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Matheson, D.. - : University of Canterbury. School of Social and Political Sciences, 2010. : University of Canterbury. Media and Communication and Journalism, 2010
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Acoustic Signs of Supraglottal Constriction in Pathological Voices
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Becoming local: Exploring adolescents' sociolinguistic limits and potential
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Is /h/ phonetically neutral?
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Abstract:
Use of /h/ in the phrase, “Say /hVC/ again” has been tacitly assumed to provide a neutral phonetic context in which to study the articulatory characteristics of speech either preceding or following /h/ articulation. Yet, assessment of the stability or neutrality of /h/ has gone untested. The current study sought to determine whether articulation of /h/ differs according to sex and language accent, as well as to examine its influence on subsequent vowel articulation. Selected acoustic features of /hVC/ were measured in 40 speakers of American English (AE) and 40 speakers of Mandarin accented English (MAE). Results of an analysis of /h/ duration revealed no sex differences within each language group, however considerable variation was found according to accented versus unaccented English. Clear sex differences were found for the production of /??, occurring more often among male speakers regardless of language variety. Considerable variation in production of /?/ was found between language groups. Analysis of vowel formant frequencies immediately following /h/ articulation indicated minimal coarticulatory effects for both AE and MAE speakers. The present results appear to support the suggestion that /h/ is not exclusively sex-linked and may indeed vary according to non-biological factors. In spite of these variations, /h/ articulation appears to have a negligible influence on neighboring vowel articulation.
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Keyword:
acoustics analysis; Communication and Culture; Communication and Culture::2004 - Linguistics; English; Field of Research::20 - Language; fricative; Mandarin; sex differences; speech production measurement; voice
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URL: https://doi.org/10.3109/02699200903247896 http://hdl.handle.net/10092/4393
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