This study presents a large-scale investigation of sociolinguistic variation in the phonetic realisation and phonemic status of FOOT and STRUT in Manchester English. As a Northern dialect of English, Manchester speakers typically lack the distinction between the FOOT and STRUT vowels, such that \u27stud\u27 and \u27stood\u27 are homophones. The data in the present study reveal that, despite the vast majority of speakers having no difference in production and perception, there is variation both in the phonemic status and the phonetic realisation of the two vowel classes within the speech community. The study is based on the acoustic analysis of a sample of 123 speakers stratified by age, gender, socio-economic status, and ethnicity, recorded...
This thesis offers a multidimensional (sociolinguistic, phonetic, and phonological) description and ...
This thesis offers a multidimensional (sociolinguistic, phonetic, and phonological) description and ...
This pilot study investigates the speech of three West Midlands communities: a city (Birmingham), a ...
This study presents a large-scale investigation of sociolinguistic variation in the phonetic realisa...
This study presents a large-scale investigation of sociolinguistic variation in the phonetic realisa...
The foot–strut vowel split, which has its origins in 17th century English, is notable for its absenc...
The FOOT and STRUT lexical sets did not undergo a historical split in the North of England, and thes...
The FOOT and STRUT lexical sets did not undergo a historical split in the North of England, and thes...
The FOOT and STRUT lexical sets did not undergo a historical split in the North of England, and thes...
The FOOT and STRUT lexical sets did not undergo a historical split in the North of England, and thes...
This study presents a preliminary empirical socio-phonetic investigation of the realisations of the ...
This pilot study investigates the speech of three West Midlands communities: a city (Birmingham), a ...
This paper examines the phonemic status of the vowels in the lexical sets of TRAP, BATH, PALM and ST...
This thesis offers a multidimensional (sociolinguistic, phonetic, and phonological) description and ...
This thesis offers a multidimensional (sociolinguistic, phonetic, and phonological) description and ...
This thesis offers a multidimensional (sociolinguistic, phonetic, and phonological) description and ...
This thesis offers a multidimensional (sociolinguistic, phonetic, and phonological) description and ...
This pilot study investigates the speech of three West Midlands communities: a city (Birmingham), a ...
This study presents a large-scale investigation of sociolinguistic variation in the phonetic realisa...
This study presents a large-scale investigation of sociolinguistic variation in the phonetic realisa...
The foot–strut vowel split, which has its origins in 17th century English, is notable for its absenc...
The FOOT and STRUT lexical sets did not undergo a historical split in the North of England, and thes...
The FOOT and STRUT lexical sets did not undergo a historical split in the North of England, and thes...
The FOOT and STRUT lexical sets did not undergo a historical split in the North of England, and thes...
The FOOT and STRUT lexical sets did not undergo a historical split in the North of England, and thes...
This study presents a preliminary empirical socio-phonetic investigation of the realisations of the ...
This pilot study investigates the speech of three West Midlands communities: a city (Birmingham), a ...
This paper examines the phonemic status of the vowels in the lexical sets of TRAP, BATH, PALM and ST...
This thesis offers a multidimensional (sociolinguistic, phonetic, and phonological) description and ...
This thesis offers a multidimensional (sociolinguistic, phonetic, and phonological) description and ...
This thesis offers a multidimensional (sociolinguistic, phonetic, and phonological) description and ...
This thesis offers a multidimensional (sociolinguistic, phonetic, and phonological) description and ...
This pilot study investigates the speech of three West Midlands communities: a city (Birmingham), a ...