In this article we examine three different hiatus resolution phenomena (Vowel Merger, Semivocalization and Back Vowel deletion) in five different urban regions in the north, centre and south of Portugal. These five regions show similarities with the Standard variety of European Portuguese: specifically lexical stress blocks Vowel Merger, whereas Semivocalization and Back vowel deletion allow stress in the second vowel. The geographic distribution of each phenomenon was also looked into and it was concluded that Semivocalization is far more frequent in the north than back vowel deletion, which is the preferred pattern in the south. Furthermore, all the phenomena are constrained by prosodic conditions, including prominence levels
In this paper I deal with vowel reduction in Brazilian Portuguese and other languages, illustrating ...
Recent observations of native speakers of European Portuguese (EP) suggest that a major change in th...
In Brazilian Portuguese, there are at least two types of unstressed syllables: pretonic and final. P...
Glide insertion to break hiatus has long been reported in the literature to occur ...
This paper presents new acoustic data on Portuguese central-southern dialects, namely on the stresse...
This paper presents new acoustic data on Portuguese central-southern dialects, namely on the stresse...
This paper presents new information on the vowel u in Portuguese central-southern dialects, which ca...
We investigate glide insertion to break a hiatus between central vowels (V1_V2) in four regions of t...
The deletion of medial post-stressed vowel, a process that leads to regularization of words with ant...
O presente artigo revisa a proposta de Bisol (1989, 1994, 2012) sobre a existência de verdadeiros e ...
ABSTRACT This work presents a study of Brazilian Portuguese pre-stressed vowels in penultimate, tris...
This paper examines four acoustic correlates of vowel identity in Brazilian Portuguese (BP) and Euro...
This paper addresses the acoustic realisations of the pretonic vowels /e, o/ that have been previous...
The paper's aim is two-fold: 1, to give an acoustical depiction of the vowel systems of Portuguese n...
This paper discusses non-assimilatory vowel raising of the pretonic mid vowels /e, o/ (d[e]sconto ~ ...
In this paper I deal with vowel reduction in Brazilian Portuguese and other languages, illustrating ...
Recent observations of native speakers of European Portuguese (EP) suggest that a major change in th...
In Brazilian Portuguese, there are at least two types of unstressed syllables: pretonic and final. P...
Glide insertion to break hiatus has long been reported in the literature to occur ...
This paper presents new acoustic data on Portuguese central-southern dialects, namely on the stresse...
This paper presents new acoustic data on Portuguese central-southern dialects, namely on the stresse...
This paper presents new information on the vowel u in Portuguese central-southern dialects, which ca...
We investigate glide insertion to break a hiatus between central vowels (V1_V2) in four regions of t...
The deletion of medial post-stressed vowel, a process that leads to regularization of words with ant...
O presente artigo revisa a proposta de Bisol (1989, 1994, 2012) sobre a existência de verdadeiros e ...
ABSTRACT This work presents a study of Brazilian Portuguese pre-stressed vowels in penultimate, tris...
This paper examines four acoustic correlates of vowel identity in Brazilian Portuguese (BP) and Euro...
This paper addresses the acoustic realisations of the pretonic vowels /e, o/ that have been previous...
The paper's aim is two-fold: 1, to give an acoustical depiction of the vowel systems of Portuguese n...
This paper discusses non-assimilatory vowel raising of the pretonic mid vowels /e, o/ (d[e]sconto ~ ...
In this paper I deal with vowel reduction in Brazilian Portuguese and other languages, illustrating ...
Recent observations of native speakers of European Portuguese (EP) suggest that a major change in th...
In Brazilian Portuguese, there are at least two types of unstressed syllables: pretonic and final. P...