This paper investigates mergers of the DRESS-TRAP and FOOT-GOOSE vowels in pre-lateral position for speakers of diverse varieties of English in Melbourne, Australia. A total of 35 participants were recorded producing 22 words from a list representing 11 monophthongs in pre-t and pre-l position. The vowels were measured for F1, F2, and duration, from which Pillai scores were calculated. Variation due to the speakers’ variety of English was as predicted. Duration contrasts for both vowel pairs were present for most speakers as a way to differentiate the vowels when their formants overlapped. This was expected for FOOT-GOOSE but previously unreported for DRESS-TRAP
This study presents a large-scale investigation of sociolinguistic variation in the phonetic realisa...
This paper examines changes in the perception of Australian English lax vowels between 1988 and 2004...
In studies of dialect variation, the articulatory nature of vowels is sometimes inferred from forman...
This paper investigates mergers of the DRESS-TRAP and FOOT-GOOSE vowels in pre-lateral position for ...
The English low back vowel merger, where words like caught and cot are pronounced identically, is a ...
This paper attempts to examine the monophthong phoneme merger phenomena across English accents spoke...
This paper investigates a merger-in-progress of /e/-/æ/ in prelateral contexts for speakers of Austr...
This exploratory study looks at evidence of merger between /el/ and /æl/ in Australian English, and ...
The aims of the study were to discover more about patterns of a recent vowel change known as GOOSE-f...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 105-116.1. Introduction -- 2. Literature review -- 3. Methods...
This paper investigates a merger-in-progress of /e/- /æ/ in prelateral contexts for speakers of Aus...
This paper investigates a merger-in-progress of /e/-/æ/ in prelateral contexts for speakers of Austr...
This study examines dynamic acoustic-articulatory relations in back vowels, focusing on the effect o...
AbstractThe short front vowels KIT /ɪ/, TRAP /æ/, and DRESS /ɛ/differ in their realization between s...
The combination of the retraction of TRAP and the merger of LOT and THOUGHT can be found in a number...
This study presents a large-scale investigation of sociolinguistic variation in the phonetic realisa...
This paper examines changes in the perception of Australian English lax vowels between 1988 and 2004...
In studies of dialect variation, the articulatory nature of vowels is sometimes inferred from forman...
This paper investigates mergers of the DRESS-TRAP and FOOT-GOOSE vowels in pre-lateral position for ...
The English low back vowel merger, where words like caught and cot are pronounced identically, is a ...
This paper attempts to examine the monophthong phoneme merger phenomena across English accents spoke...
This paper investigates a merger-in-progress of /e/-/æ/ in prelateral contexts for speakers of Austr...
This exploratory study looks at evidence of merger between /el/ and /æl/ in Australian English, and ...
The aims of the study were to discover more about patterns of a recent vowel change known as GOOSE-f...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 105-116.1. Introduction -- 2. Literature review -- 3. Methods...
This paper investigates a merger-in-progress of /e/- /æ/ in prelateral contexts for speakers of Aus...
This paper investigates a merger-in-progress of /e/-/æ/ in prelateral contexts for speakers of Austr...
This study examines dynamic acoustic-articulatory relations in back vowels, focusing on the effect o...
AbstractThe short front vowels KIT /ɪ/, TRAP /æ/, and DRESS /ɛ/differ in their realization between s...
The combination of the retraction of TRAP and the merger of LOT and THOUGHT can be found in a number...
This study presents a large-scale investigation of sociolinguistic variation in the phonetic realisa...
This paper examines changes in the perception of Australian English lax vowels between 1988 and 2004...
In studies of dialect variation, the articulatory nature of vowels is sometimes inferred from forman...