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1
A Perception Study of Rioplatense Spanish
In: McNair Scholars Research Journal (2019)
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2
The PIN/PEN Merger
In: Kansas State University Undergraduate Research Conference (2019)
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3
Data for: Word frequency effects in sound change as a consequence of perceptual asymmetries: An exemplar-based model ...
Todd, Simon. - : Mendeley, 2019
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4
Data for: Word frequency effects in sound change as a consequence of perceptual asymmetries: An exemplar-based model ...
Todd, Simon. - : Mendeley, 2019
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5
Data for: Influence of L2 English phonotactics in L1 Brazilian Portuguese illusory vowel perception ...
Cabrelli Amaro, Jennifer. - : Mendeley, 2019
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6
Data for: Influence of L2 English phonotactics in L1 Brazilian Portuguese illusory vowel perception ...
Cabrelli Amaro, Jennifer. - : Mendeley, 2019
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7
CONSIDERACIONES EN TORNO AL VERSO ALEJANDRINO DESDE LA HISTORIA DE LA LENGUA
In: Tonos Digital; NÚMERO 36 - ENERO 2019 (2019)
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8
The Effects of English Pronunciation Instruction on Listening Skills among Vietnamese Learners
In: Masters Theses (2019)
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9
Data for: Alignment of f0 peak in different pitch accent types affects perception of metrical stress ...
Zahner, Katharina. - : Mendeley, 2019
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10
Data for: Alignment of f0 peak in different pitch accent types affects perception of metrical stress ...
Zahner, Katharina. - : Mendeley, 2019
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11
Does standard Chinese mean anything for Cantonese vowel variation?
In: English Faculty Scholarship (2019)
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12
Vowel shifts in Cantonese?: Toronto vs. Hong Kong
In: English Faculty Scholarship (2019)
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13
Orthographic and Phonological Processing in Beginning Readers
In: Senior Theses (2019)
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14
Diphthongization of /u/ in Midwestern American English
In: Honors Theses at the University of Iowa (2019)
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15
Final Vowel Devoicing in Blackfoot
Prins, Samantha Leigh. - : University of Montana, 2019
In: Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers (2019)
Abstract: This thesis presents a study of final vowel devoicing in Blackfoot, an indigenous language of Montana and Alberta. Previous research on final vowel devoicing in Blackfoot variously suggests word-final, phrase-final, and utterance-final vowel devoicing processes (e.g. Taylor 1965, Bliss & Gick 2009, Frantz 2017), though, the conditioning environment for this phenomenon had not been a research focus prior to this study. The present study investigates intonation units (IUs) as the conditioning domain for final vowel devoicing in Blackfoot. Final vowel devoicing in Blackfoot is investigated here by examining the common word-final suffixes –wa (3SG.AN) and –yi (4SG) in two recordings of connected speech. Each recording features a different native speaker of Blackfoot. Speakers were asked to generate a narrative to go along with illustrations in a picture book. These recordings are interlinearized using ELAN annotation software. Next, tokens of –wa and –yi are analyzed acoustically using Praat phonetic software. Then, –wa and –yi tokens are analyzed in terms of their position within the intonation unit (IU-medial or IU-final). Finally, the data are collated, giving the frequencies of different phonetic variants as well as the distribution of phonetic variants across IU-medial and IU-final environments. The findings of this study are that fully-audible variants of –wa and –yi almost always occur IU-medially, while devoiced variants are most frequently found in IU-final position. Based on these findings, this thesis proposes an IU-final vowel devoicing rule to describe the phonetic variation and distribution of –wa and –yi in connected speech. The analysis put forth in this thesis has implications for the theoretical classification of vowel devoicing phenomena, for linguistic research methodologies, and for the typology of intonation units cross-linguistically. Furthermore, the findings of this work bear on language documentation, revitalization, and pedagogy.
Keyword: Applied Linguistics; connected speech; discourse; Discourse and Text Linguistics; indigenous language; intonation unit; Language Description and Documentation; Linguistics; Modern Languages; Morphology; Other Linguistics; phonetics; Phonetics and Phonology; phonology; Typological Linguistics and Linguistic Diversity
URL: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=12428&context=etd
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/11363
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16
Learning Exceptionality and Variation with Lexically Scaled MaxEnt
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2019)
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17
French schwa and gradient cumulativity
In: Joe Pater (2019)
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18
Learning Reduplication with a Neural Network without Explicit Variables
In: Joe Pater (2019)
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19
Q-Theory Representations are Logically Equivalent to Autosegmental Representations
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2019)
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20
RNN Classification of English Vowels: Nasalized or Not
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2019)
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