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A real-time study of plosives in Glaswegian using an automatic measurement algorithm: change or age-grading?
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Seeing Speech
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In: http://www.seeingspeech.ac.uk/ <http://www.seeingspeech.ac.uk/> (2015)
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Seeing Speech: an articulatory web resource for the study of phonetics
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Dynamic Dialects: an articulatory web resource for the study of accents
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Bunched /r/ promotes vowel merger to schwar: an ultrasound tongue imaging study of Scottish sociophonetic variation
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Pre-aspiration and post-aspiration in Scottish Gaelic stop consonants
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Abstract:
This paper aims to describe pre-aspirated and post-aspirated stops in an endangered language, Scottish Gaelic. Our small-scale study investigates several acoustic parameters of Scottish Gaelic stop consonants designed to measure the duration and noisiness of aspiration of the stop in its immediate phonetic context. Our study expands on previous phonetic descriptions of phonemic (pre-)aspiration in three ways: firstly, we provide a more complete durational description of Scottish Gaelic than previous work in the literature; secondly, we apply a new measure, band-pass filtered zero crossing rate (Gordeeva and Scobbie 2010), in order to examine the noisiness of aspiration in addition to durational characteristics. The results from this measure are presented in tandem with durational results in order to assess its usefulness for future research. Thirdly, we consider the possibility of change in the Scottish Gaelic stop system by examining data from older and younger speakers. Results suggest that band-pass filtered zero crossing rate is a useful tool and should be considered in future research on aspiration. Also, durational and zero crossing results indicate that younger speakers have shorter and less noisy pre-aspiration than older speakers. We discuss these results as a possible sound change in progress.
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Keyword:
P Philology. Linguistics
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URL: http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/86482/ http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/86482/1/86482.pdf
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7 |
A law unto themselves? An acoustic phonetic study of 'tonal' consonants in British Panjabi
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In: In: Laws and Rules in Indo-European. (2012) (2012)
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A law unto themselves? An acoustic phonetic study of tonal consonants in Panjabi
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'One of them sounds sort of Glasgow Uni-ish'. Social judgements and fine phonetic variation in Glasgow
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Socially-stratified sampling in laboratory-based phonological experimentation
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Back to front: a socially-stratified ultrasound tongue imaging study of Scottish English /u/
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Hybridity and ethnic accents: A sociophonetic analysis of ‘Glaswasian’
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A single case study of articulatory adaptation during acoustic mimicry
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Identity and ethnicity in /t/ in Glasgow-Pakistani high-school girls
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Responding to accents after experiencing interactive or mediated speech
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The social stratification of tongue shape for postvocalic /r/ in Scottish English
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The role of the individual in language variation and change
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