While some sound changes occur in environments defined in purely phonological terms, others may become sensitive to morphological boundaries. In this paper, we investigate the phonetic nature of this latter diachronic development: does it happen through small gradient increments, or is there a categorical shift from one allophone to another? We focus on goose-fronting and /l/-darkening in Southern British English, the interaction of which is sensitive to morphological boundaries. Relatively retracted realisations of the vowel and dark realisations of the /l/ appear before a morpheme boundary, even when a vowel follows (e.g. fool-ing), whereas in monomorphemic words (e.g. hula), there is more /uː/-fronting, and the /l/ is relatively lighter....
A pertinacious issue within linguistics is the asymmetry of sound-meaning and meaning-sound relation...
ABSTRACT: We consider allophonic and speaker-specific variation in the alveolar gestures found in vo...
Item deposited in University of Manchester, Research Explorer repository, available at: https://www....
While some sound changes occur in environments defined in purely phonological terms, others may beco...
The fronting of the high-back, /u:/ and /U/, as currently seen in Southern British English, is a ra...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of /l/-darkening in English, using ultrasound tongue imagi...
The phenomenon of /l/-darkening has been a subject of linguistic interest due to the remarkable amou...
This dissertation is situated in broad debates about the architecture of the phonological grammar, a...
The phenomenon of /l/-darkening has been a subject of linguistic interest due to the remarkable amou...
Phonological processes that exhibit morphosyntactic sensitivity can provide evidence of historical p...
This paper examines the role of morphological structure in the reduced pronunciation of morphologica...
The prevailing view of phonological development is that changes in pronunciation are driven by phono...
This article questions the view that phonetics governs exclusively gradient phenomena. Experimental ...
Recent acoustic studies have provided evidence that /u/ (GOOSE) and /U/ (FOOT) have fronted in the s...
It is uncontroversial that, in many varieties of English, the realization of /l/ varies depending on...
A pertinacious issue within linguistics is the asymmetry of sound-meaning and meaning-sound relation...
ABSTRACT: We consider allophonic and speaker-specific variation in the alveolar gestures found in vo...
Item deposited in University of Manchester, Research Explorer repository, available at: https://www....
While some sound changes occur in environments defined in purely phonological terms, others may beco...
The fronting of the high-back, /u:/ and /U/, as currently seen in Southern British English, is a ra...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of /l/-darkening in English, using ultrasound tongue imagi...
The phenomenon of /l/-darkening has been a subject of linguistic interest due to the remarkable amou...
This dissertation is situated in broad debates about the architecture of the phonological grammar, a...
The phenomenon of /l/-darkening has been a subject of linguistic interest due to the remarkable amou...
Phonological processes that exhibit morphosyntactic sensitivity can provide evidence of historical p...
This paper examines the role of morphological structure in the reduced pronunciation of morphologica...
The prevailing view of phonological development is that changes in pronunciation are driven by phono...
This article questions the view that phonetics governs exclusively gradient phenomena. Experimental ...
Recent acoustic studies have provided evidence that /u/ (GOOSE) and /U/ (FOOT) have fronted in the s...
It is uncontroversial that, in many varieties of English, the realization of /l/ varies depending on...
A pertinacious issue within linguistics is the asymmetry of sound-meaning and meaning-sound relation...
ABSTRACT: We consider allophonic and speaker-specific variation in the alveolar gestures found in vo...
Item deposited in University of Manchester, Research Explorer repository, available at: https://www....