This paper investigates variation in the production of word-final vowels in Blackfoot, an Algonquian language spoken by approximately 3350 people in Southern Alberta and Northern Montana. The Blackfoot community perceives the language as partitioning into varieties, based on the age of the speaker; ‘old Blackfoot’ is richly polysynthetic and spoken by people born in the 1930s and earlier, whereas ‘new Blackfoot’ is thought to be missing certain inflections, and is spoken by people born in the 1940s or later. Final vowels, which encode a morphosyntactic distinction referred to as obviation, are thought to be particularly susceptible to language loss. Gick et al. (2012) document the phonetic properties of one Blackfoot speaker’s final vowels,...
This article briefly surveys the literature on inversion and obviation in Blackfoot, identifies some...
This paper discusses the main characteristics of the IPA-based standard orthography developed for Bl...
This dissertation compares the phonetic and phonological features of adult non-speakers' productions...
This paper investigates variation in the production of word-final vowels in Blackfoot, an Algonquian...
This thesis presents a study of final vowel devoicing in Blackfoot, an indigenous language of Montan...
In this thesis I propose that the distribution of /s/ in Blackfoot can be explained by positing that...
This dissertation explores the argument-typing system of Blackfoot, a Plains Algonquian language spo...
Algonquian languages, including Blackfoot, are renowned for their failure to directly follow the Uni...
Blackfoot (Siksika), an Algonquian language spoken in Southern Alberta and in Northwestern Montana,...
Structural change in a language are considered nearly inevitable consequences of language death (Cam...
This dissertation represents the first acoustic phonetic description of Kawaiisu, an endangered lang...
Michif is a language growing out of the contact between Europeans and Native Americans, mostly Frenc...
This dissertation quantifies fronting of the high and lower-high back vowels and glide-weakening of ...
[PAPER]: In an investigation of paradigmatic forms of Blackfoot nominals, we found that nominal root...
This paper presents results of the first quantitative phonetic study of Koasati, a Muskogean languag...
This article briefly surveys the literature on inversion and obviation in Blackfoot, identifies some...
This paper discusses the main characteristics of the IPA-based standard orthography developed for Bl...
This dissertation compares the phonetic and phonological features of adult non-speakers' productions...
This paper investigates variation in the production of word-final vowels in Blackfoot, an Algonquian...
This thesis presents a study of final vowel devoicing in Blackfoot, an indigenous language of Montan...
In this thesis I propose that the distribution of /s/ in Blackfoot can be explained by positing that...
This dissertation explores the argument-typing system of Blackfoot, a Plains Algonquian language spo...
Algonquian languages, including Blackfoot, are renowned for their failure to directly follow the Uni...
Blackfoot (Siksika), an Algonquian language spoken in Southern Alberta and in Northwestern Montana,...
Structural change in a language are considered nearly inevitable consequences of language death (Cam...
This dissertation represents the first acoustic phonetic description of Kawaiisu, an endangered lang...
Michif is a language growing out of the contact between Europeans and Native Americans, mostly Frenc...
This dissertation quantifies fronting of the high and lower-high back vowels and glide-weakening of ...
[PAPER]: In an investigation of paradigmatic forms of Blackfoot nominals, we found that nominal root...
This paper presents results of the first quantitative phonetic study of Koasati, a Muskogean languag...
This article briefly surveys the literature on inversion and obviation in Blackfoot, identifies some...
This paper discusses the main characteristics of the IPA-based standard orthography developed for Bl...
This dissertation compares the phonetic and phonological features of adult non-speakers' productions...