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1
High vowel shortening in Turkish
In: Proceedings of the Workshop on Turkic and Languages in Contact with Turkic; Vol 6 (2021); 5060 ; 2641-3485 (2022)
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2
Production of the French High Vowels /i y u/ by English-Speaking Learners and French Native Speakers in a Reading Task in Tandem Language Learning
In: Newsounds 2019 : The 9th International Symposium on the Acquisition of Second Language Speech ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02337180 ; Newsounds 2019 : The 9th International Symposium on the Acquisition of Second Language Speech, Aug 2019, Tokyo, Japan (2019)
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3
The effectiveness of real-time ultrasound visual feedback on tongue movements in L2 pronunciation training
In: ISSN: 2215-1931 ; EISSN: 2215-194X ; Journal of Second Language Pronunciation ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02194902 ; Journal of Second Language Pronunciation, John Benjamins, 2019, 5 (1), pp.72-97. ⟨10.1075/jslp.16022.ant⟩ (2019)
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4
The relevance of phonetics teaching for english sounds perception
In: Revista Virtual Lingu@ Nostr@; v. 4 n. 2 (2016): 7ª Edição da Revista Lingu@ Nostr@; 3 - 22 ; 2317-2320 (2019)
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5
Palatalization, fortition and deletion in the high vowels of Arcadian Greek
In: Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics; Vol 41 No 1 (2019): Proceedings of MOT 2019 ; 1718-3510 ; 1705-8619 (2019)
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6
Desenvolvimento da duração das vogais altas anteriores arredondadas [yː]-[ʏ] do Alemão Padrão (AP) por um falante nativo brasileiro em contexto de instrução fonética
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7
High tone lowering and raising in Tsua
In: Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus, Vol 54, Iss 0, Pp 1-16 (2018) (2018)
Abstract: The Tsua language is an Eastern Kalahari Khoe language of Botswana (Chebanne 2014). Tsua tone production displays complex Fundamental Frequency (F0) trajectories. Lexical data show that this language has three tone levels: High (H), Mid (M), and Low (L), with the following surface tone melodies: [HH, HM, HL, MM, MH, ML]. High tones may be lowered when they occur following voiced obstruents, aspirated obstruents or the glottal fricative /h/ in root-initial position, a typologically rare pattern. This results in two depressed melodies: depressed HM [DH-M] and depressed HL [DH-L]. Both clicks and non-clicks participate in this interaction. We refer to this tonal depression pattern as High Tone Lowering (HTL). HTL may be formally accounted for via the Low tone insertion rule: ∅ → L / [-sonorant, +slack] ___ H [-H] #. Recent analysis suggests that Super High (SH) tones are derived from /H/ when docked to the high vowels [i], [u] and are not phonemic. For example, underlying /HL/ tűù “to collect and remove ash” is produced with SH-L tones on the surface. We refer to this as High Tone Raising (HTR). Elderkin (1988) reports a similar finding in Ju|ʼhoan in which a sequence of successive extra-high tones is only found in click-initial morphs when the final vowel is [i] or [u]. It may be that an Intrinsic F0 (IF0) effect from the Tsua high vowels was a historical factor that led to the genesis of HTR. Given that voiced, aspirated and /h/ consonant types depress a root-initial H tone and the high vowels [i], [u] raise H tones, the paper considers phonetically-driven origins of these patterns.
Keyword: African languages and literature; depressor consonants; high vowels; Intrinsic F0; Khoisan; P1-1091; Philology. Linguistics; PL8000-8844; Tone
URL: https://doaj.org/article/676a9692345b4510b9000bb25aeff7f8
https://doi.org/10.5842/54-0-772
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8
Automated Classification of Vowel Category and Speaker Type in the High-Frequency Spectrum
In: Audiology Research; Volume 6; Issue 1; Pages: 137 (2016)
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9
Weight and feet in Québécois
Bosworth, Yulia. - 2011
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10
Lowering of high vowels by French immersion students in Canada
Vickerman, Alison. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2009
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11
Lowering of high vowels by French immersion students in Canada
Vickerman, Alison. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2009
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12
Fort Wayne and the northern cities vowel shift
In: Virtual Press (2003)
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13
Phonetic Consequences of Speech Disfluency
In: DTIC (1999)
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14
The Effects of High Sustained Acceleration on the Acoustic Phonetic Structure of Speech. A Preliminary Investigation.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1986)
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