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Japanese perceptual epenthesis is modulated by transitional probability
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When more is more : the mixed language Light Warlpiri amalgamates source language phonologies to form a near-maximal inventory
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A Happy Marriage: The Stop and Affricate Inventory of the Mixed Language Light Warlpiri (Australia)
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In: https://assta.org/proceedings/ICPhS2019/ (2020)
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Voice Onset Time and Constriction Duration in Warlpiri Stops (Australia)
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In: Proceedings of the 19th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences ; https://www.icphs2019.org/ (2020)
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Pause acceptability indicates word-internal structure in Wubuy
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Japanese co-occurrence restrictions influence second language perception
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Using deep neural networks to estimate tongue movements from speech face motion
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Child Kriol has stop distinctions based on VOT and constriction duration
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Consonantal timing and release burst acoustics distinguish multiple coronal stop place distinctions in Wubuy (Australia)
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Pause acceptability is predicted by morphological transparency in Wubuy
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Discrimination of Multiple Coronal Stop Contrasts in Wubuy (Australia): A Natural Referent Consonant Account
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Perception of voicing in the absence of native voicing experience
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Discrimination of multiple coronal stop contrasts in Wubuy (Australia) : a natural referent consonant account
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Wubuy coronal stop perception by speakers of three dialects of Bangla
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A comparison of the acoustics of nonsense and real word stimuli : coronal stops in Bengali
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The vowel inventory of Roper Kriol
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Abstract:
Despite being the largest Indigenous Australian language, Kriol—an English-lexified creole spoken across the northern part of Australia—is still largely unexamined from an instrumental or phonological point of view. This hampers efforts to predict crosslinguistic difficulties experienced by Kriol speakers in English-language settings and crucially in predicting the difficulties that Kriol-speaking children face in learning Standard Australian English. We report here on the vowel inventory of Kriol, which has previously been claimed to have between five and seven monophthongs and three or four diphthongs ([19],[20]). We show that its vowel system is in fact a triangular five-vowel system, with a duration contrast, and a number of diphthongs. This system thus reflects, in certain respects, typical inventories of the Indigenous substrate languages, except that, by radically increasing the number of available phonemes, Kriol has managed to keep the majority of vowel contrasts of English intact.
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Keyword:
200404 - Laboratory Phonetics and Speech Science; 970120 - Expanding Knowledge in Languages; Australia; Communication and Culture; creole dialects; phonetics; phonology; vowels
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URL: http://www.icphs2015.info/ http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:32879
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