Contemporary New Zealand English has distinctive pronunciations of three characteristic vowels. Did the evolution of these distinctive pronunciations occur in all words at the same time or were different words affected differently? We analyze the changing pronunciation of New Zealand English in a large set of recordings of speakers born over a 130 year period. We show that low frequency words were at the forefront of these changes and higher frequency words lagged behind. A long-standing debate exists between authors claiming that high frequency words lead regular sound change and others claiming that there are no frequency effects. The leading role of low frequency words is surprising in this context. It can be elucidated in models of lexi...
Social dialect data dernonstrcrte. ~ tliat wornen tend ro lead lingui.$tic ctiange in New Zealand En...
This study investigates the influence of frequency on the production of bimorphemic words, and consi...
The paper investigates – within the framework of usage-based phonology – the significance of lexical...
AbstractContemporary New Zealand English has distinctive pronunciations of three characteristic vowe...
This paper investigates the emergence of lexicalized effects of word usage on word duration by looki...
The claim that high-frequency words tend to undergo regular sound change faster than less frequent w...
This thesis investigates change in a number of phonological variables in New Zealand English (NZE) d...
This study examines how lexical frequency and planning problems can predict phonetic variability in ...
Empirically-observed word frequency effects in regular sound change present a puzzle: how can high-f...
Empirically-observed word frequency effects in regular sound change present a puzzle: how can high-f...
Recent research on frequency effects in phonology suggest that word frequency is often a significan...
© 2017 The Australian Linguistic Society. Although there have been many studies of New Zealand Engli...
In this paper we present the results of a trend analysis comparing acoustic vowel data collected fro...
Forvo.com is a user-driven online dictionary of word and short phrase pronunciations, where individu...
This study presents an acoustic analysis looking at phonetic diversity in Auckland. New Zealand Engl...
Social dialect data dernonstrcrte. ~ tliat wornen tend ro lead lingui.$tic ctiange in New Zealand En...
This study investigates the influence of frequency on the production of bimorphemic words, and consi...
The paper investigates – within the framework of usage-based phonology – the significance of lexical...
AbstractContemporary New Zealand English has distinctive pronunciations of three characteristic vowe...
This paper investigates the emergence of lexicalized effects of word usage on word duration by looki...
The claim that high-frequency words tend to undergo regular sound change faster than less frequent w...
This thesis investigates change in a number of phonological variables in New Zealand English (NZE) d...
This study examines how lexical frequency and planning problems can predict phonetic variability in ...
Empirically-observed word frequency effects in regular sound change present a puzzle: how can high-f...
Empirically-observed word frequency effects in regular sound change present a puzzle: how can high-f...
Recent research on frequency effects in phonology suggest that word frequency is often a significan...
© 2017 The Australian Linguistic Society. Although there have been many studies of New Zealand Engli...
In this paper we present the results of a trend analysis comparing acoustic vowel data collected fro...
Forvo.com is a user-driven online dictionary of word and short phrase pronunciations, where individu...
This study presents an acoustic analysis looking at phonetic diversity in Auckland. New Zealand Engl...
Social dialect data dernonstrcrte. ~ tliat wornen tend ro lead lingui.$tic ctiange in New Zealand En...
This study investigates the influence of frequency on the production of bimorphemic words, and consi...
The paper investigates – within the framework of usage-based phonology – the significance of lexical...