Previous literature on the Canadian Shift describes this phenomenon as a change in progress in many dialects of Canadian English. However, elements of the shift are not found to be consistent, particularly in the lowering of [ɪ] and [ɛ] and the retraction of [æ]. This paper investigates apparent time data from eight native speakers of Canadian English from the Ottawa area to investigate the nature of the Shift in the region, as well as to better understand how the Shift is manifested here compared to previous literature. Results presented in this paper, which were collected as part of an ongoing study, show that younger speakers produce only [ɪ] and [ɛ] vowels more retracted than older speakers. These data will later be compared to results ...
In Montreal French, a process of diphthongization affects long vowels: those that are inherently lon...
Languages characteristically have regional varieties. The English language, being a world language, ...
In this paper we present the results of a trend analysis comparing acoustic vowel data collected fro...
This study provides the first wide-scale, apparent time, instrumental description of the Canadian Sh...
This study provides the first wide-scale, apparent time, instrumental description of the Canadian Sh...
Introduction. The Canadian Vowel Shift (CS), generally described as a systematic lowering and backin...
This paper continues the investigation of earlier work done on lax vowel lowering as part of a chang...
This study examines the linguistic and regional variation of the low, unrounded vowel, referred to h...
In this paper, I address the apparent homogeneity of Canadian English (cf. Chambers, 1998) through a...
The variety of middle-class speakers in St. John’s conforms to some degree to mainland Canadian-Engl...
Previous accounts of the Canadian Shift, which have interpreted this diachronic process as a purely ...
Canadian speakers of English tend to align their phonetic pronunciations with British variations as ...
This paper examines two current sound changes in Canadian English (CE): the Canadian Shift (CS) and ...
From a continental perspective, Canadian English exhibits two remarkable phonetic patterns. Canadian...
This paper addresses Labov’s principles of vowel chain shifting in Toronto and Hong Kong Cantonese b...
In Montreal French, a process of diphthongization affects long vowels: those that are inherently lon...
Languages characteristically have regional varieties. The English language, being a world language, ...
In this paper we present the results of a trend analysis comparing acoustic vowel data collected fro...
This study provides the first wide-scale, apparent time, instrumental description of the Canadian Sh...
This study provides the first wide-scale, apparent time, instrumental description of the Canadian Sh...
Introduction. The Canadian Vowel Shift (CS), generally described as a systematic lowering and backin...
This paper continues the investigation of earlier work done on lax vowel lowering as part of a chang...
This study examines the linguistic and regional variation of the low, unrounded vowel, referred to h...
In this paper, I address the apparent homogeneity of Canadian English (cf. Chambers, 1998) through a...
The variety of middle-class speakers in St. John’s conforms to some degree to mainland Canadian-Engl...
Previous accounts of the Canadian Shift, which have interpreted this diachronic process as a purely ...
Canadian speakers of English tend to align their phonetic pronunciations with British variations as ...
This paper examines two current sound changes in Canadian English (CE): the Canadian Shift (CS) and ...
From a continental perspective, Canadian English exhibits two remarkable phonetic patterns. Canadian...
This paper addresses Labov’s principles of vowel chain shifting in Toronto and Hong Kong Cantonese b...
In Montreal French, a process of diphthongization affects long vowels: those that are inherently lon...
Languages characteristically have regional varieties. The English language, being a world language, ...
In this paper we present the results of a trend analysis comparing acoustic vowel data collected fro...