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1
Investigating the Sound Change in the New Zealand English Nurse Vowel /ᴈ:/
Maclagan M; Watson CI; Harlow R. - : Informa UK Limited, 2019
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2
Represented Speech in Dementia Discourse
Maclagan M; Davis B. - 2018
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3
Building a Māori Language Pronunciation Tool Based on a Māori Speaker Database
Keegan, P.; King, J.; Harlow, R.; Maclagan, M.; Watson, C.. - : University of Canterbury. Communication Disorders, 2016. : University of Canterbury. New Zealand Institute of Language, Brain&Behaviour, 2016. : University of Canterbury. Aotahi School of Māori and Indigenous Studies, 2016
Abstract: Māori is the only indigenous language of Aotearoa/New Zealand. It is southern most Polynesian language, spoken by some 160,000 (~4% of population. Māori is an endangered language despite significant efforts to revitalize the language since the 1980s. The MAONZE (Māori-New Zealand) project team have been studying Māori sound change over time, focussing on vowels and rhythm, attempting to determine both internally and externally motivated change. Data includes three groups of male and female speakers, historical speakers born in the 1880s, present day elders born between 1920 and 1944, and young speakers born between 1969 and 1985. The pronunciation of vowels in Māori was changed over time. For example, /u u:/ have become more “fronted” and /e e:/ have become more “raised” Evidence for diphthong mergers between /ai/ and /ae/ and between /au/ and /ou/. There has been a loss of durational distinctions between long and short vowel pairs. There is a significant difference in the vowels of the present day youth compared to both the present day and historical elders.
Keyword: communication and culture::4704 - Linguistics::470410 - Phonetics and speech science; Fields of Research::45 - Indigenous studies::4507 - Te ahurea; Fields of Research::47 - Language; language and history)::450712 - Te mātai i te reo Māori me te reo Māori (Māori linguistics and languages); reo me te hītori o te Māori (Māori culture
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10092/13213
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4
Developing a Māori Language Pronunciation Tool Based on a Māori Speaker Database
Maclagan, M.; Watson, C.I.; Harlow, R.. - : University of Canterbury. Communication Disorders, 2016. : University of Canterbury. New Zealand Institute of Language, Brain&Behaviour, 2016. : University of Canterbury. Aotahi School of Māori and Indigenous Studies, 2016
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5
Diphthong trajectories in Maori
King, J.; Harlow, R.; Keegan, P.. - : University of Canterbury. Aotahi School of Maori and Indigenous Studies, 2014. : University of Canterbury. Communication Disorders, 2014. : University of Canterbury. New Zealand Institute of Language, Brain & Behaviour, 2014
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6
Adventures in mita-reading: examining stress 'rules' and perception of prosodic prominence in the Māori language
In: http://www.icphs2011.hk/ICPHS_CongressProceedings.htm ; http://www.icphs2011.hk/resources/OnlineProceedings/RegularSession/Thompson/Thompson.pdf (2011)
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7
Analyzing liquids
Lawson, E.; Stuart-Smith, J.; Scobbie, J.M.. - : Routledge, 2010
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8
/u/ fronting and /t/ aspiration in Mori and New Zealand english
In: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S095439450999007X (2009)
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9
Ngā Nekehanga o te Whakahua i te Reo Māori i roto i te Rautau kua Hipa nei
In: http://www.alternative.ac.nz/journal/volume4-issue2/article/ng%C4%81-nekehanga-o-te-whakahua-i-te-reo-m%C4%81ori-i-roto-i-te-rautau-kua-hip (2008)
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10
ARTICLES - Determinism in new-dialect formation and the genesis of New Zealand English
In: Journal of linguistics. - London [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 36 (2000) 2, 299-318
OLC Linguistik
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