نتایج جستجو برای: consonant cluster

تعداد نتایج: 206258  

1998
Shuri Kumagai

It is widely claimed that close vowels in Japanese are devoiced when they occur between voiceless consonants. In this paper, voiceless vowels are represented symbolically as [V-] and voiced vowels as [V+]. The patterns of linguopalatal contact during C[V-]C units and the corresponding C[V+]C units are examined using the method of electropalatography (EPG). Our results show that C[V-]C units and...

2000
Andrew Carnie

The well-studied phenomenon of vowel lengthening before tense sonorants in Modern Irish (Ó Siadhail 1989, Ó Siadhail and Wigger 1975, Ó Baoill 1979), exemplified in (1), is now well understood as a compensatory process (see for example Ní Chiosain 1991). Tense or long sonorants (L, L', R', N, N', m) trigger vowel lengthening and/or diphthongization. What is not clear about this phenomenon is th...

2011
Seiya Funatsu Satoshi Imaizumi Masako Fujimoto Ryoko Hayashi

Japanese vowel devoicing was investigated from the viewpoint of perception, an approach which has not been taken in any previous studies. It appears in some dialects of Japanese, including Tokyo dialect. Three tests, a vowel preference test, a same/different test, and an inter-stimulus interval effect test were performed. In the vowel preference tests, 46.3% of devoiced vowel dialects speakers ...

2007
Robert Bannert

One aim of the research project “Prosodic coding and decoding of words in fluent speech: a cross-language investigation between Swedish, Greek and French (ProCoF)” is to investigate the syllable from a phonological and phonetic point of view. Due to the differing opinions about the rules for syllabification in Swedish, a methodological study has been carried out in order to shed light on the co...

Journal: :International Journal of Uncertainty, Fuzziness and Knowledge-Based Systems 2009

Journal: :Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 2021

Abstract This paper provides a new explanation for the insertion of * in plural forms CVCC- nouns also formed with an external suffix, e.g. ʕabd- : ʕabad-ū- ‘servant(s)’, various Semitic languages. CVCaC-ū- pattern is usually considered to be remnant Proto-Semitic broken system Northwest Semitic, but we show that it goes back this form. Internal evidence from as well comparative Afroasiatic poi...

Journal: :Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior 2011
Juliana V Baldo David P Wilkins Jennifer Ogar Sharon Willock Nina F Dronkers

Previous research has suggested that the left anterior insula, specifically the superior precentral gyrus of the insula (SPGI), is a critical brain region for the coordination of complex articulatory movements. However, previous studies have not determined which articulatory factors are specifically dependent on this brain region. In the current study, 33 left hemisphere stroke patients with va...

1999
Peter F. MacNeilage Barbara L. Davis

Consonant repetition ("reduplication") predominates in #CVC sequences in babbling and early words, gradually giving way to consonant variation ("variegation") with a "Fronting" pattern whereby the first consonant has a more anterior place of articulation than the second. The various reduplicative patterns are primarily attributed to a "Frame" consisting of rhythmic mandibular oscillation. Evide...

Journal: :J. Phonetics 2013
Lasse Bombien Christine Mooshammer Phil Hoole

Intra-gestural and inter-gestural coordination in German word-initial consonant clusters /kl, kn, ks, pl, ps/ is investigated in four speakers by means of EMA as a function of segmental make-up and prosodic variation, i.e. prosodic boundary strength and lexical stress. Segmental make-up is shown to determine the extent of articulatory overlap of the clusters, with /kl/ exhibiting the highest de...

2013
Rei Yasuda Frank Zimmerer

In Tokyo Japanese, vowel devoicing is a common process, that leads to the reduction of high, unstressed vowels ( and ) between unvoiced consonants. This article investigates to what extent native Japanese speakers (L1) learning German as foreign language (L2) show a strong tendency to produce these vowels in the foreign language as devoiced, too. Furthermore, the question is addressed whe...

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