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"This book combines theoretical and experimental approaches to provide a comprehensive account of glottalization in word-final syllables in Italian. The speech production study at the heart of the book sheds light on the source of glottalization, the contextual factors determining its occurrence, and the acoustic correlates which characterize its production. Acoustic analysis of words presenting evidence of glottalization is carried out through visual inspection of the acoustic signal together with spectral analysis of voice quality. Statistical analysis of the data in the study is performed using mixed effects models, as well as tree-based methods including conditional inference trees and random forests. Results of the study have implications for cross-linguistic studies on voice quality"--
Glottalization (Phonetics). --- Glottalization (Phonetics). --- Italian language --- Italian language --- Italian language --- Italian language --- Phonology. --- Phonology. --- Pronunciation. --- Pronunciation.
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This monograph contains two detailed case studies dealing with the phonetics and phonology of affricates and laryngeals. Based on a survey of 281 languages it states a number of universal generalizations which go counter to common assumptions in the phonological and phonetic literature. Most importantly, (1) a phonological concept ›affricate‹ does not exist at all. Affricates are exclusively stops for matters of phonological contrasts and natural classes, but they are no contour segments composed of [stop] and [continuant]. (2) Laryngeal features are properties of the prosodic level of onset, nucleus, and coda, but not of individual segments. Again, this is shown to hold for contrasts and phonology proper (assimilation, neutralization, 'metathesis' etc.). Based on the empirical findings the book addresses a number of theoretical issues as, e.g., the interaction of phonetics and phonology, or questions of phonological representation. It is claimed that phonetics fulfills important functions with regard to phonology: 'affrication' and laryngeal phasings (e.g. pre- vs. postaspiration) are presented as purely phonetic strategies which serve to make phonological specifications acoustically more salient. Finally, two revisions to current models of feature theory are proposed, both of which lead to a leaner structure of phonological segments: first, stricture contours are eliminated from phonological representation; second, the 'Laryngeal Node' is attached directly to onsets, nuclei, and codas. Die Monographie enthält zwei Einzelstudien zur Phonologie und Phonetik von Affrikaten und Laryngalen aus insgesamt 281 Sprachen. Die empirischen Ergebnisse widerlegen eine Reihe gängiger Lehrmeinungen, z.B.: (1) Affrikaten sind phonologisch ausschließlich Plosive, (2) Laryngale sind Eigenschaften prosodischer Domänen (Anlaut, Nukleus, Koda), (3) Phonetische Strategien (Affrikatisierung, laryngale Phasierung) dienen der akustischen Verstärkung phonologischer Kontraste. Auf theoretischer Ebene werden Fragen der phonologischen Repräsentation (Merkmalskonturen, prososodische Lizensierung etc.) sowie der Schnittstelle von Phonologie und Phonetik diskutiert.
Grammar, Comparative and general --- Laryngeals (Phonetics) --- Phonology. --- Glottalisatie (Fonetiek) --- Glottalisation (Phonétique) --- Glottalization (Phonetics) --- Laryngalen (Fonetiek) --- Laryngales (Phonétique) --- Phonology --- Phonetics --- Grammar [Comparative and general ] --- Phonology [Comparative ] --- Linguistics --- Philology --- Grammar, Comparative and general Phonology
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This work proposes a definition of the notion of salience in sociolinguistics. Salient linguistic variants are those that are easily picked up by the listeners, and these stand in opposition to `invisible' variants, which are, even if they also show complex social stratification, completely ignored. Taking a quantitative angle, this work sees salience as a function of relative frequency differences, giving it an empirically testable operationalisation.
Korpus. --- Salienz. --- Soziolinguistik. --- Saillance linguistique --- Glottalization (Phonetics) --- Characterology of speech --- Language diversity --- Language subsystems --- Language variation --- Linguistic diversity --- Variation in language --- Glottalic air-stream mechanism (Phonetics) --- Glottalic sounds (Phonetics) --- Glottalisation (Phonetics) --- Lexicology. Semantics --- Mathematical linguistics --- English language --- Sociolinguistics --- Cognitive grammar. --- Language and languages --- Linguistic change. --- Sociolinguistics. --- Language and society --- Society and language --- Sociology of language --- Language and culture --- Linguistics --- Sociology --- Integrational linguistics (Oxford school) --- Change, Linguistic --- Language change --- Historical linguistics --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- Laryngeals (Phonetics) --- Cognitive linguistics --- Psycholinguistics --- Variation. --- Social aspects --- Sociological aspects --- Phonology --- Linguistics. --- Sociolinguistique --- Sociolinguistique. --- Saillance linguistique. --- Phonetics
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