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Discrimination of multiple coronal stop contrasts in Wubuy (Australia): a natural referent consonant account
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Frequency in the input affects perception of phonological contrasts for native speakers
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Articulatory basis of the apical/laminal distinction : tongue tip/body coordination in the Wubuy 4-way coronal stop contrast
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Exploring nonlinear relationships between speech face motion and tongue movements using Mutual Information
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The obstruent inventory of Roper Kriol
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Abstract:
Roper Kriol is a major variety of the largest Indigenous Australian language, Kriol, yet its phonology remains under-described and it has never been examined instrumentally. Reports suggest high variability. We present a lexical survey with native Kriol speakers followed by two acoustic studies of the obstruent inventory with literate speakers, and finally an acoustic analysis of naturally occurring speech. We conclude that the obstruent inventory has inherited features from the substrate languages and English. It has contrastive stop voicing using Voice Onset Time differences in an English-like manner. It also has contrastive fricatives, but no voicing distinction in these phonemes. Like some of the substrate languages, stops also contrast in constriction duration to a much greater degree than English. There is no evidence that voicing is a variable phenomenon, and we suggest that the reported variability is due to language shift over several generations from a situation where it was primarily an L2 used by speakers of the substrate languages to the stabilized L1 form of Kriol described here. We argue that the creole continuum is unlikely to apply to true phonemic inventory differences, as opposed to surface phonetic forms and other aspects of grammar such as lexical choice.
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Keyword:
XXXXXX - Unknown
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/07268602.2014.898222 http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/564493
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27 |
Now you see it, now you don't : frequency distribution of articulatory information reflected in speech face motion
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Speech articulator movements recorded from facing talkers using two electromagnetic articulometer systems simultaneously
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30 |
Multimodal speech animation from electromagnetic articulography data
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31 |
Vowel acoustics reliably differentiate three coronal stops of Wubuy across prosodic contexts
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Second language learners' vocabulary expansion is associated with improved second language vowel intelligibility
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Vowel acoustics reliably differentiate three coronal stops of Wubuy across prosodic contexts
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Vocabulary size matters : the assimilation of second-language Australian English vowels to first-language Japanese vowel categories
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Vocabulary size is associated with second-language vowel perception performance in adult learners
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Tongue body position differences in the coronal stop consonants of Wubuy
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A kinematic analysis of temporal differentiation of the four-way coronal stop contrast in Wubuy (Australia)
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