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1
Ancestral Language Use and Native Food Knowledge and Practice as the Basis for a Diabetes Education Program
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2
Forced Alignment for Understudied Language Varieties: Testing Prosodylab-Aligner with Tongan Data
Johnson, Lisa M.; Di Paolo, Marianna; Bell, Adrian. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2018
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Forced Alignment for Understudied Language Varieties: Testing Prosodylab-Aligner with Tongan Data
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4
Forced Alignment for Understudied Language Varieties: Testing Prosodylab-Aligner with Tongan Data
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5
Language revitalization as rebuilding a speech community
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6
Language revitalization as rebuilding a speech community
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7
Languages and dialects in the U.S. : focus on diversity and linguistics
Di Paolo, Marianna (Hrsg.). - New York [u.a.] : Routledge, 2014
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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8
Sociophonetics : a student's guide
Di Paolo, Marianna (Hrsg.). - London [u.a.] : Routledge, 2011
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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9
Sociophonetics : a student's guide
Di Paolo, Marianna (Hrsg.). - 1. publ. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, 2011
IDS Mannheim
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10
The peripatetic history of Middle English */E/
Faber, Alice; Di Paolo, Marianna; Best, Catherine T.. - : U.S.A, Walter de Gruyter, 2010
Abstract: In Modern English, descendants of Middle English *ē, *ε, and *ε (when lengthened in open syllables) are merged in /i/. Examination of the historical sources and of modern dialects suggests that things were a bit more complicated, however. In particular, while *ε (whether merged with *ε, as in Standard English, or not, as in some scattered dialects) approached *ē in the 14th century, it did not merge with *ē until the 17th century. In the interim, *ε (but not *ē) approached *ǣ (or *æj), an approximation that is reflected both in contemporary prescriptive records and in scattered modern dialects. These historical developments are best understood in terms of a view of language change that is not restricted to investigating historical antecedents of prestige and standard dialects and that takes as a given that languages of the past were typologically and structurally comparable to languages of the present. Thus, for example, if near mergers are observed in present languages, the possibility of near merger cannot be excluded in discussions of past languages. A further consequent of our reexamination of *ε is that additional doubt is cast on the chronological and conceptual unity of the Great English Vowel Shift.
Keyword: dialects; English language; phonology; speech perception; vowels
URL: http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/511305
http://ezproxy.uws.edu.au/login?url=http://www.degruyter.com/viewbooktoc/product/41855
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11
On the status of low back vowels in Kentucky English: More evidence of merger
In: Language variation and change. - New York, NY : Cambridge Univ. Press 19 (2007) 2, 137
OLC Linguistik
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12
The discriminability of nearly merged sounds
In: Language variation and change. - New York, NY : Cambridge Univ. Press 7 (1995) 1, 35-78
OLC Linguistik
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13
The discriminability of nearly merged sounds
In: Language variation and change. - New York, NY : Cambridge Univ. Press 7 (1995) 1, 35-78
BLLDB
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14
The discriminability of nearly merged sounds
In: Speech research (New Haven, Conn.), p. 81-112
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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15
The discriminability of nearly merged sounds
In: Speech research. - New Haven, Conn. : Haskins Laboratories (1994) 117-118, 81-112
BLLDB
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16
Propredicate "do" in the English of the Intermountain West
In: American speech. - Durham, NC : Duke Univ. Press 68 (1993) 4, 339-356
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17
Communicative accomodation : a new perspective on 'hypercorrect' speech
Yaeger-Dror, Malcah (Hrsg.); Janda, Richard D. (Mitarb.); Auger, Julie (Mitarb.)...
In: Language & communication. - New York, NY [u.a.] : Elsevier 12 (1992) 3-4, 181-356
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18
Phonation differences and the phonetic content of the tense-lax contrast in Utah English
In: Language variation and change. - New York, NY : Cambridge Univ. Press 2 (1990) 2, 155-204
BLLDB
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19
Jurors' beliefs about the interpretation of speaking style
In: American speech. - Durham, NC : Duke Univ. Press 65 (1990) 4, 304-322
BLLDB
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20
Double modals as single lexical items
In: American speech. - Durham, NC : Duke Univ. Press 64 (1989) 3, 195-224
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