The phonetic gesture of stop consonant aspiration, which is predictable in a Germanic language such as English, has been described traditionally as ranging from a “puff of air ” upon release of closure (Heffner 1950) to the segmental occurrence of a following voiceless glottal approximant /h / (Trager & Smith 1951). Within th
Except for cavity enlargement strategies there is not much consensus about the involvement of supral...
In Basque, there is evidence, especially in early loans from Latin, that a sequence #DV(R)T… where D...
We consider two theories of laryngeal representation, one using a single feature [voice] generalizin...
This paper builds on growing evidence that aspirated or fortis obstruents in lan-guages like English...
Tins study investigates the occurrence and the production of glottalised stops in German. While the ...
This dissertation examines aspirated consonants in Icelandic from several angles, including dialecta...
It is well known that initially and when preceded by a word that ends with a voiceless sound, German...
Although Dutch, English and German all have a phonological contrast between voiced and voiceless plo...
This article examines the linguistic forces at work in present-day second language and bilingual acq...
Much theoretical phonology in the 1990s has focused on the characterization of “voicing” assimilatio...
This study examines intraoral pressure for English and German stops in bilabial and alveolar place o...
As can be shown for English data, the assimilation of the alveolar stop can result from an increased...
This work investigates laryngeal and supralaryngeal correlates of the voicing contrast in alveolar o...
This work is a slightly modified version of my PhD thesis carried out in collaboration between the C...
International audienceThe paper discusses laryngeal oppositions among Germanic languages and discuss...
Except for cavity enlargement strategies there is not much consensus about the involvement of supral...
In Basque, there is evidence, especially in early loans from Latin, that a sequence #DV(R)T… where D...
We consider two theories of laryngeal representation, one using a single feature [voice] generalizin...
This paper builds on growing evidence that aspirated or fortis obstruents in lan-guages like English...
Tins study investigates the occurrence and the production of glottalised stops in German. While the ...
This dissertation examines aspirated consonants in Icelandic from several angles, including dialecta...
It is well known that initially and when preceded by a word that ends with a voiceless sound, German...
Although Dutch, English and German all have a phonological contrast between voiced and voiceless plo...
This article examines the linguistic forces at work in present-day second language and bilingual acq...
Much theoretical phonology in the 1990s has focused on the characterization of “voicing” assimilatio...
This study examines intraoral pressure for English and German stops in bilabial and alveolar place o...
As can be shown for English data, the assimilation of the alveolar stop can result from an increased...
This work investigates laryngeal and supralaryngeal correlates of the voicing contrast in alveolar o...
This work is a slightly modified version of my PhD thesis carried out in collaboration between the C...
International audienceThe paper discusses laryngeal oppositions among Germanic languages and discuss...
Except for cavity enlargement strategies there is not much consensus about the involvement of supral...
In Basque, there is evidence, especially in early loans from Latin, that a sequence #DV(R)T… where D...
We consider two theories of laryngeal representation, one using a single feature [voice] generalizin...