The article investigates variation in the duration of the pronunciation of the Danish adverb egentlig in a large corpus of spoken modern Danish. The article shows that there is considerable variation in the duration of egentlig, and that this variation only to some extent can be explained by speech rate (or ‘articulation rate’). It is shown that the individual speaker has a significant impact on the variation. By the useof a mixed-model multiple linear regression analysis that incorporates the effect on duration that the individual speaker has, the investigation reveals that linguistic factors such as topology and utterance-final position together with factors relating to linguistic processing such as articulation rate and the position near...
Words which are expected to contain the same surface string of segments may, under identical prosodi...
Variation in Negerhollands has been viewed as an artifact of language death. This study demonstrates...
In the present investigation we aim to determine to which degree linguistic factors contribute to th...
This paper presents data concerning differences in segment duration in Standard Danish due to s...
This paper explores the application of quantitative methods to study the effect of various factors o...
This investigation compares articulation rates of phonological and phonetic syllables in Norwegian, ...
This paper analyses speaking rate variations in English and Danish and relates them to problems enco...
It is a well-known overt feature of the Northern Jutlandic variety of Danish that /t/ is pronounced ...
The study focuses on durational variation of segments in read speech of Czech and British speakers o...
This study reports a detailed analysis of 159 tokens of the Dutch discourse marker eigenlijk, uttere...
In this study, we investigate whether diachronic lenition is a factor in the previously found asymme...
This study examines how lexical frequency and planning problems can predict phonetic variability in ...
This study investigates the effects of lexical frequency on the durational reduction of morphologica...
Words in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utterance-medial words, as ...
This thesis focuses on the asymmetrical mutual intelligibility relation of Danish and Swedish, combi...
Words which are expected to contain the same surface string of segments may, under identical prosodi...
Variation in Negerhollands has been viewed as an artifact of language death. This study demonstrates...
In the present investigation we aim to determine to which degree linguistic factors contribute to th...
This paper presents data concerning differences in segment duration in Standard Danish due to s...
This paper explores the application of quantitative methods to study the effect of various factors o...
This investigation compares articulation rates of phonological and phonetic syllables in Norwegian, ...
This paper analyses speaking rate variations in English and Danish and relates them to problems enco...
It is a well-known overt feature of the Northern Jutlandic variety of Danish that /t/ is pronounced ...
The study focuses on durational variation of segments in read speech of Czech and British speakers o...
This study reports a detailed analysis of 159 tokens of the Dutch discourse marker eigenlijk, uttere...
In this study, we investigate whether diachronic lenition is a factor in the previously found asymme...
This study examines how lexical frequency and planning problems can predict phonetic variability in ...
This study investigates the effects of lexical frequency on the durational reduction of morphologica...
Words in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utterance-medial words, as ...
This thesis focuses on the asymmetrical mutual intelligibility relation of Danish and Swedish, combi...
Words which are expected to contain the same surface string of segments may, under identical prosodi...
Variation in Negerhollands has been viewed as an artifact of language death. This study demonstrates...
In the present investigation we aim to determine to which degree linguistic factors contribute to th...