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Definite Change Taking Place: Determiner Realization in Multiethnic Communities in New Zealand
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In: University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics (2020)
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An Acoustic Analysis of New Zealand English Vowels in Auckland
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Tongue Retraction in Arabic: An Ultrasound Study
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In: Proceedings of the Annual Meetings on Phonology; Proceedings of the 2016 Annual Meeting on Phonology ; 2377-3324 (2017)
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Comparison of vocal tract shape modelling methods: MRI vs AR
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Assessing and improving the intelligibility of synthetic speech for healthcare robot
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Liu, Wei. - : ResearchSpace@Auckland, 2013
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Perception of synthetic speech with emotion modelling delivered through a robot platform: an initial investigation with older listeners
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Perception of synthetic speech with emotion modelling delivered through a robot platform: an initial investigation with older listeners
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Perception of synthetic speech with emotion modelling delivered through a robot platform: an initial investigation with older listeners
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Changes in the pronunciation of Māori and implications for teachers and learners of Māori
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/u/ fronting and /t/ aspiration in Māori and New Zealand English
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Abstract:
This article examines the relationship between the frontness of /u/ and the aspiration of /t/ in both Māori and New Zealand English (NZE). In both languages, these processes can be observed since the earliest recordings dating from the latter part of the nineteenth century. We report analyses of these developments for three groups of male speakers of Māori spanning the twentieth century. We compare the Māori analyses with analyses of related features of the speakers' English and of the English of monolingual contemporaries. The occurrence of these processes in Māori cannot be seen simply as interference from NZE as the Māori-speaking population became increasingly bilingual. We conclude that it was the arrival of English with its contrast between aspirated and unaspirated plosives, rather than direct borrowing, that was the trigger for the fronting of the hitherto stable back Māori /u/ vowel together with increased aspiration of /t/ before both /i/ and /u/.
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Keyword:
English; Maori; New Zealand; New Zealand English
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URL: https://hdl.handle.net/10289/3307 https://doi.org/10.1017/S095439450999007X
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Age-related changes in fundamental frequency and formants : a longitudinal study of four speakers
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Blocking of word-boundary consonant lengthening in Sienese Italian
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Developmental trends in infant preferences for affective intent in mothers' speech
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Deepening or lessening the divide between diphthongs : an analysis of the Queen's annual Christmas broadcasts
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