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1
Malayalam three-way rhotics contrast: Articulatory modelling based on MRI data
In: ISSP 2020 - 12th International Seminar on Speech Production ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03132829 ; ISSP 2020 - 12th International Seminar on Speech Production, Dec 2020, Providence (virtual), United States (2020)
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2
An MRI-based articulatory characterization of Kannada coronal consonant contrasts
In: https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03031319 ; 2020 (2020)
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3
Constraints on Distribution of Palatalized Stops: Evidence for Licensing by Cue
In: North East Linguistics Society (2020)
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4
Foreword
In: Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics; Vol 40 (2018): Special issue from the CRC-sponsored phonology/phonetics workshops ; 1718-3510 ; 1705-8619 (2018)
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5
Allophonic variation in English coronal stops: An EPG corpus study
In: Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics; Vol 40 (2018): Special issue from the CRC-sponsored phonology/phonetics workshops ; 1718-3510 ; 1705-8619 (2018)
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6
Ejective Harmony in Lezgian
Ozburn, Avery; Kochetov, Alexei. - : University of Toronto, 2018
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7
A Phonetic Examination of Rhotics: Gestural Representation Accounts for Phonological Behaviour
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8
Gradient and Categorical Effects in Native and Non-native Nasal-rhotic Coordination
In: Proceedings of the Annual Meetings on Phonology; Proceedings of the 2017 Annual Meeting on Phonology ; 2377-3324 (2018)
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9
Palatalization and glide strengthening as competing repair strategies: Evidence from Kirundi
In: Glossa: a journal of general linguistics; Vol 1, No 1 (2016); 14 ; 2397-1835 (2016)
Abstract: Alternations involving place-changing palatalization (e.g. t+j → ʧ in spirit – spiritual) are very common and have been a focus of much generative phonological work since Chomsky & Halle’s (1968) ‘Sound Pattern of English’. The interest in palatalization and its mechanisms (see e.g. Sagey 1990; Chen 1996; Bateman 2007) has somewhat obscured the question of how these processes fit into a wider typology of segmental alternations. What happens when palatalization fails to apply? Do other processes take its place and apply under the same circumstances? In this paper, I argue for a close functional and formal affinity between place-changing palatalization and one such process, palatal glide strengthening (e.g. p+j → pc). As evidence I present data from Kirundi (Bantu) on the realization of consonant + palatal and velar glide sequences within and across morphemes. As will be shown, palatalization and glide strengthening in Kirundi work in parallel, affecting different subsets of consonants. Specifically, palatalization targets C+j sequences with laryngeals, velars, nasal coronals, and – across morpheme boundaries – non-nasal coronals. In contrast, glide strengthening targets C+j sequences with labials and – within morphemes – non-nasal coronals. In addition, glide strengthening applies to within- and across-morpheme consonant + velar glide sequences, producing a set of outputs (e.g. m+w → mŋ) similar to C+j sequences. I further present a unified Optimality Theoretic (Prince & Smolensky 1993/2004) account of these seemingly disparate phenomena as both arising from different rankings of constraints prohibiting consonant + glide sequences (parameterized by place and/or manner) and various feature-specific agreement and faithfulness constraints. Finally, I explore typological predictions of this account, reviewing several remarkably similar cases of C + glide resolution patterns from other languages, and outlining questions for further research on consonant-vowel/glide interactions.This article is part of the special collection: Palatalization
Keyword: glide strengthening; Kirundi; linguistics; Optimality Theory; palatalization; phonetics; phonological typology; phonology
URL: https://www.glossa-journal.org/jms/article/view/gjgl.32
https://doi.org/10.5334/gjgl.32
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10
Spatial and dynamic aspects of retroflex production: An ultrasound and EMA study of Kannada geminate stops
In: Journal of phonetics. - Amsterdam : Elsevier 46 (2014), 168-184
OLC Linguistik
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11
Voice onset time across the generations : a cross-linguistic study of contact-induced change
In: Multilingualism and language diversity in urban areas (2013)
IDS Mannheim
12
Nasal variability and speech style: an EPG study of word-final nasals in two Spanish dialects
In: Italian journal of linguistics. - Ospedaletto, (Pisa) : Pacini 24 (2012) 1, 11-42
BLLDB
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13
Phonology and phonetics of epenthetic vowels in loanwords: experimental evidence from Korean
In: Lingua <Amsterdam>. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier 121 (2011) 3, 511-532
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14
Coronal place contrasts in Argentine and Cuban Spanish: an electropalatographic study
In: International Phonetic Association. Journal of the International Phonetic Association. - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 41 (2011) 3, 313-342
BLLDB
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15
Palatalization
In: Phonological processes (Malden, Mass, 2011), p. 1666-1690
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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16
Bruce Hayes, Robert Kirchner, Donca Steriade (eds.): Phonetically based phonology [Rezension]
In: Phonology. - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 26 (2009) 2, 353-362
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17
Japanese mimetic palatalisation revisited: implications for conflicting directionality
In: Phonology. - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 26 (2009) 3, 369-388
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18
Phonetic variability and grammatical knowledge: an articulatory study of Korean place assimilation
In: Phonology. - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 25 (2008) 3, 399-432
OLC Linguistik
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19
Phonetic variability and grammatical knowledge: an articulatory study of Korean place assimilation.
In: Phonology (2008)
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20
Phonology and phonetics of loanword adaptation: Russian place names in Japanese and Korean
In: Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics; Vol 28 (2008): Proceedings of the International Conference on East Asian Linguistics ; 1718-3510 ; 1705-8619 (2008)
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