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Hits 21 – 34 of 34

21
Identity, accent aim, and motivation in second language users:new Scottish Gaelic speakers’ use of phonetic variation
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22
Identity, accent aim, and motivation in second language users: New Scottish Gaelic speakers' use of phonetic variation
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23
Intonational variation in Liverpool English
Groarke, Eve; Kirkham, Sam; Nance, Claire. - : University of Glasgow, 2015
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24
‘New’ Scottish Gaelic speakers in Glasgow:a phonetic study of language revitalisation
Nance, Claire. - 2015
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25
Intonational variation and change in Scottish Gaelic
Nance, Claire. - 2015
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26
Phonetic variation in Scottish Gaelic laterals
In: Journal of phonetics. - Amsterdam : Elsevier 47 (2014), 1-17
OLC Linguistik
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27
Joan Beal, Lourdes Burbano-Elizondo and Carman Llamas. 2012. Urban North-Eastern English: Tyneside to Teesside
In: English world-wide. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 35 (2014) 2, 230-233
OLC Linguistik
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28
Phonetic variation in Scottish Gaelic laterals
Nance, Claire. - 2014
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29
Pre-aspiration and post-aspiration in Scottish Gaelic stop consonants
In: International Phonetic Association. Journal of the International Phonetic Association. - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 43 (2013) 2, 129-152
OLC Linguistik
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30
Phonetic variation, sound change, and identity in Scottish Gaelic
Nance, Claire. - : University of Glasgow, 2013
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31
Pre-aspiration and post-aspiration in Scottish Gaelic stop consonants
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32
Pre-aspiration in Lewis Gaelic Stop Consonants
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33
Phonetic variation, sound change, and identity in Scottish Gaelic
Nance, Claire. - 2013
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34
High back vowels in Scottish Gaelic
Nance, Claire. - 2011
Abstract: This study provides an acoustic phonetic analysis of some of the vowels in an endangered language with little phonetic documentation, Scottish Gaelic. It tests previous mainly impressionistic analyses which claim Scottish Gaelic has phonemic vowel length, and contrasts four high back vowels /u  o /. Results suggest four vowels are indeed contrasted, and that phonemic /u/ is divided into two phonetically distinct allophones. Phonemic vowel length is robustly maintained, but younger and older speakers differ in some areas for vowel quality: for younger speakers one allophone of /u/ is moving closer to /i/, and the other allophone of /u/ has merged with /o/.
URL: https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/67232/
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