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1
La classification des suffixes: de Guierre à aujourd’hui
In: Workshop « 40 ans de Guierre » ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03627977 ; Workshop « 40 ans de Guierre », Mar 2022, Paris, France (2022)
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2
Lexical Stress in Standard Aboriginal English: A comparative Corpus Based Account of Dictionary and Spoken Data
In: Phonology of Contemporary English 2021 (PAC2021) ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03524481 ; Phonology of Contemporary English 2021 (PAC2021), Phonology of Contemporary English - Phonologie de l'Anglais Contemporain, Sep 2021, Toulouse and Online, France ; https://blogs.univ-tlse2.fr/pac2021/ (2021)
Abstract: International audience ; The development of Australian English (AusE) as a New English variety has aroused much discussion over the last two decades (Schneider 2007, Trudgill 2010, Watt et al. 2018). Sociohistorical reconstructions have endeavoured to account for the specific sociophonetic flavour of the language (e.g. Horvath 1985, Cox and Palethorpe 2017), while huge corpus- based undertakings have been devoted to enlightening more recent regional and social linguistic variation (e.g. Pho 2009, Bradshaw 2010, Burnham et al. 2011) and to examining the evolution in status of AusE in its differentiating stage (Peters 2014). Throughout AusE’s relatively short history, language contact has been playing a major role in which, along with Ethnolectal varieties of AusE (Clyne et al. 2001) and LOTE (Lo Bianco 1987), Aboriginal languages and Aboriginal Englishes have contributed to mould a unique Australian linguistic situation.The scope of this paper is twofold: we present a systemic account of lexical stress in Standard Australian English (SAusE) as well as Standard Aboriginal English (SAbE) (e.g. Malcolm and Kaldor 1991, Eades 1993, Vinson 2008) as compared with SAusE (for a treatment of lexical stress in loanwords from Aboriginal languages in SAusE, see Dixon 2002, Dixon et al. 2006 among others). The second goal of this paper is to test the commonly accepted hypothesis that speakers of Aboriginal Englishes have a tendency to put stress on the first syllable of words that are not initially-stressed in SAusE (kangaroo, Toyota, see Malcolm 2004, Butcher 2008), or to elide the initial vowel in words such as along or suppose. Some authors state that this is the fact because words are usually initially stressed in Aboriginal languages (Douglas 1978, Tabain et al. 2004, Malcolm 2021).In order to address this issue, we chose to adopt two theoretical and methodological frameworks in a complementary perspective: a Guierrian approach of lexical stress relying on dictionary data, morphological and orthographic information (Guierre 1979), and that of corpus phonology (Durand, Gut & Kristoffersen 2014) which enables us to confront our preliminary Guierrian results to the lexical stress patterns in authentic spoken data.The Guierrian theoretical precondition allows for an exhaustive treatment of some pronunciation dictionaries of Standard Englishes (Longman Pronunciation Dictionary, Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary) as well as the Macquarie Dictionary database for Australian English and Dixon et al. 2006 for the specific lexicon of loanwords from Aboriginal languages. This thorough investigation leads us to submit a reanalysis of words (dissyllabic verbs, prefixed multicategorial words and words known as exceptions in a Guierrian context) that may display lexical stress variation in contemporary English (Deschamps 2000 among others). This also enables us to build a specific corpus to test non- initially stressed words which are susceptible to show stress shift towards the left in SAbE.We then confront our preliminary Guierrian results to an analysis of lexical stress patterns in the framework of corpus phonology, and more specifically in a variationist sociophonological corpus of SAbE. We first consider lexical stress patterns from the Aboriginal English component of AusTalk (An audio-visual corpus of Australian English) corpus (Burnham et al. 2011). We then examine our results against some authentic spoken data and corresponding sociolinguistic metadata taken from the PAC-Australia Aboriginal English data (The Phonology of Contemporary English: usage, varieties, structure, Fabre 2018).Our paper shows that 94% of words that are sensitive to word-stress variation show no intervarietal stress variation in SAusE, SAmE and SBrE. As for loanwords from Aboriginal languages as pronounced in SAusE, 98% show the same stress placement. We also show that in terms of stress placement in borrowings from Aboriginal languages, the Guierrian rules account for 83% of the patterns whereas the initial stress rule inherited from the source languages does so for 78%. As for speakers of SAbE, we show that stress shift is present for a limited number of items, the great majority of which are three-syllable words that bear final stress in SAusE (according to MD). We conclude by proposing some avenues to determine if this feature is indeed typical of speakers of SAbE only, or if the trend can also be established for other speakers of SAusE and other varieties of English around the world.
Keyword: [SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics; Aboriginal Englishes; Australian English; Corpus; Dictionary Data; Phonology
URL: https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03524481
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3
Les préfixés pluricatégoriels dissyllabiques : Réflexions méthodologiques sur l'analyse de corpus
In: ALOES 2014 (Conférence bisannuelle de l'Association des Linguistes Oralistes de l'Enseignement Supérieur) ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-01347372 ; ALOES 2014 (Conférence bisannuelle de l'Association des Linguistes Oralistes de l'Enseignement Supérieur), Apr 2014, Villetaneuse, France (2014)
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4
Testing Parameters for Stress Placement: The Case of Dissyllabic Prefixed Verb/Noun Pairs
In: Old World Conference in Phonology (OCP 2014) ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01346865 ; Old World Conference in Phonology (OCP 2014), Jan 2014, Leyden, Netherlands (2014)
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5
Testing Parameters for Stress Placement: the Case of Dissyllabic Prefixed Verb/Noun Pairs
In: 11ème conférence OCP (Old World Conference in Phonology) ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-02083706 ; 11ème conférence OCP (Old World Conference in Phonology), Jan 2014, Leiden, Netherlands (2014)
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6
Les préfixés pluricatégoriels dissyllabiques : Réflexions méthodologiques sur l'analyse de corpus
In: 17ème colloque d'avril sur l'anglais oral ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-02083651 ; 17ème colloque d'avril sur l'anglais oral, Apr 2014, Paris, France (2014)
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7
Stress in Dissyllabic Verb/Noun Pairs
In: 20ème Manchester Phonology Meeting ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-02083711 ; 20ème Manchester Phonology Meeting, May 2012, Manchester, United Kingdom (2012)
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8
Multicategorial prefixed words stress behaviour: Variation and frequency
In: 8ème colloque PAC (Phonologie de l'Anglais Contemporainà ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-02083677 ; 8ème colloque PAC (Phonologie de l'Anglais Contemporainà, Feb 2012, Toulouse, France (2012)
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9
Stress in Prefixed Disyllabic Verb/Noun Pairs
In: 20th Manchester Phonology Meeting ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01346880 ; 20th Manchester Phonology Meeting, May 2012, Manchester, United Kingdom (2012)
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10
Multicategorial Prefixed Words Stress Behaviour: Variation and Frequency
In: PAC Workshop 2012. The Phonology of Contemporary English: Variation and Change ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01346888 ; PAC Workshop 2012. The Phonology of Contemporary English: Variation and Change, Feb 2012, Toulouse, France (2012)
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11
LES MOTS FRANÇAIS EN -EUR (-EUSE) / -AIRE EN ANGLAIS CONTEMPORAIN: EMPRUNT ET CRÉATION LEXICALE
In: Actes du Colloque international - Les emprunts lexicaux au français dans les langues européennes ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03564849 ; M. Iliescu et alii. Actes du Colloque international - Les emprunts lexicaux au français dans les langues européennes, Universitaria, pp.145-162, 2011, Les emprunts lexicaux au français dans les langues europèennes, 978-606-14-0286-1 (2011)
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12
Les mots français en -eur (-euse) / -aire en anglais contemporain : emprunt et création lexicale.
In: Actes du colloque international "Les emprunts lexicaux au français dans les langues européennes" (Craiova, 10-12 novembre 2011) ; Colloque international "Les emprunts lexicaux au français dans les langues européennes" ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-01345413 ; Colloque international "Les emprunts lexicaux au français dans les langues européennes", Nov 2011, Craiova, Roumanie. pp.145-162 ; http://www.fromisem.ro/colocviu/ (2011)
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13
Of Lexical Stress in Contemporary Standard Australian English ; De l'accentuation lexicale en anglais australien standard contemporain
Martin, Marjolaine. - : HAL CCSD, 2011
In: https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00952144 ; Linguistique. Université François Rabelais - Tours, 2011. Français (2011)
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14
La controverse sur la transcription de l'anglais australien : une question identitaire
In: ISSN: 0995-2411 ; Travaux linguistiques du CerLiCO ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-01345399 ; Travaux linguistiques du CerLiCO, Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2011, Transcrire, écrire, formaliser, 24 (1), pp.111-126 ; http://www.pur-editions.fr/detail.php?idOuv=2717 (2011)
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