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Intonation systems across varieties of English
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In: The Oxford Handbook of Language Prosody ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03132888 ; The Oxford Handbook of Language Prosody, 2020, 9780198832232 (2020)
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Using literal underpinnings to help learners remember figurative idioms: Does the connection need to be crystal-clear?
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In: Education Publications (2020)
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Applying cognitive linguistics to second language idiom learning
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Gesture, Prosody and Information Structure Synchronisation in Turkish
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Turk, Olcay. - : Victoria University of Wellington, 2020
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Prosodic and syntactic focus in speech processing in Mandarin Chinese
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Tracking the New Zealand English NEAR/SQUARE merger using functional principal components analysis
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The /el/-/æl/ merger in Australian English:Acoustic and articulatory insights
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The Effects of Syllable and Utterance Position on Tongue Shape and Gestural Magnitude in /l/ and /r/
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The Effects of Syllable and Sentential Position on the Timing of Lingual Gestures in /l/ and /r/
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ISCAN: a System for Integrated Phonetic Analyses Across Speech Corpora
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Large-scale Acoustic Analysis of Dialectal and Social Factors in English /s/-retraction
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Abstract:
The retraction of /s/ in /str/, eg street, is a sound change found in certain English dialects. Previous work suggests that /s/-retraction arises from lower spectral frequency /s/ in /str/. The extent to which /s/-retraction differs across English dialects is unclear. This paper presents results from a large-scale, acoustic phonetic study of sibilants in 420 speakers, from 6 spontaneous speech corpora (9 dialects) of North American and Scottish English. Spectral Centre of Gravity was modelled from automatic measures of word-initial sibilants. Female speakers show higher frequency sibilants than males, but more so for /s/ than /S/; /s/ is also higher in American than Canadian/Scottish dialects; /S/ is surprisingly variable. /s/-retraction, modelled as retraction ratios, is generally greater for /str/ than /spr skr/, but varies by dialect; females show more retraction in /str/ than males. Dialectal and social factors clearly influence /s/-retraction in English clusters /sp st sk/, /spr skr/, and /str/.
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Keyword:
P Philology. Linguistics
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URL: http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/183726/ http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/183726/7/183726.pdf https://www.internationalphoneticassociation.org/icphs-proceedings/ICPhS2019/index.php
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Age Vectors vs. Axes of Intraspeaker Variation in Vowel Formants Measured Automatically From Several English Speech Corpora
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Structured Speaker Variability in Spontaneous Japanese Stop Contrast Production
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Identity, Socialization and Environment in Transgender Speakers: Sociophonetic Variation in Creak and /s/
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Annotation of German Intonation: DIMA Compared with other Annotation Systems
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Informativeness and speaking style affect the realization of nuclear and prenuclear accents in German
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Tune-text negotiation: the effect of intonation on vowel duration
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