In this paper we present a production study designed to explore the relationship between three observations which have previously been made about liquids in British English: first, that laterals have prosodically-determined ‘clear’ (syllable-initial) and ‘dark’ (syllable-final) variants; second, that some varieties of English have either clear [1] in all positions or dark [l] in all positions; third, that some varieties with clear [1] have dark [r] while some varieties with dark [1] have clear [r] (in broad phonetic transcription). We take F2 as an acoustic correlate of clearness/darkness and report on F2 variation in two representative varieties of British English, one which has clear initial [1] (Newcastle-upon-Tyne) and one with dark ini...
Recent acoustic studies have provided evidence that /u/ (GOOSE) and /U/ (FOOT) have fronted in the s...
This paper investigates the acoustic evidence for real-time change in word-final liquids (/r/ an...
While some sound changes occur in environments defined in purely phonological terms, others may beco...
This article reports a study of acoustic phonetic variation between ethnic groups in the realisation...
The phenomenon of /l/-darkening has been a subject of linguistic interest due to the remarkable amou...
Properties of syllable onset /l / that depend on the voicing of the syllable coda were measured for ...
The fronting of the high-back /uː/ and /ʊ/, as currently seen in Southern British English (SBE), is ...
This study explores the production of long-domain coarticulatory patterns associated with English /l...
This study compares the duration and first two formants (F1 and F2) of 11 nominal monophthongs and f...
Acoustic studies of several languages indicate that second-formant (F2) slopes in high vowels have o...
Allophonic patterns of variation in English laterals have been well studied in phonetics and phonolo...
The following article has been submitted to/accepted by The Journal of the Acoustical Society of Ame...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of /l/-darkening in English, using ultrasound tongue imagi...
Nuclear pitch accents are realized differently when there is little sonorant material (as in monosyl...
This paper examines the phonemic status of the vowels in the lexical sets of TRAP, BATH, PALM and ST...
Recent acoustic studies have provided evidence that /u/ (GOOSE) and /U/ (FOOT) have fronted in the s...
This paper investigates the acoustic evidence for real-time change in word-final liquids (/r/ an...
While some sound changes occur in environments defined in purely phonological terms, others may beco...
This article reports a study of acoustic phonetic variation between ethnic groups in the realisation...
The phenomenon of /l/-darkening has been a subject of linguistic interest due to the remarkable amou...
Properties of syllable onset /l / that depend on the voicing of the syllable coda were measured for ...
The fronting of the high-back /uː/ and /ʊ/, as currently seen in Southern British English (SBE), is ...
This study explores the production of long-domain coarticulatory patterns associated with English /l...
This study compares the duration and first two formants (F1 and F2) of 11 nominal monophthongs and f...
Acoustic studies of several languages indicate that second-formant (F2) slopes in high vowels have o...
Allophonic patterns of variation in English laterals have been well studied in phonetics and phonolo...
The following article has been submitted to/accepted by The Journal of the Acoustical Society of Ame...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of /l/-darkening in English, using ultrasound tongue imagi...
Nuclear pitch accents are realized differently when there is little sonorant material (as in monosyl...
This paper examines the phonemic status of the vowels in the lexical sets of TRAP, BATH, PALM and ST...
Recent acoustic studies have provided evidence that /u/ (GOOSE) and /U/ (FOOT) have fronted in the s...
This paper investigates the acoustic evidence for real-time change in word-final liquids (/r/ an...
While some sound changes occur in environments defined in purely phonological terms, others may beco...