Cross-linguistically, segments typically lengthen because of proximity to prosodic events such as intonational phrase or phonological phrase boundaries, a phrasal accent, or due to lexical stress. Australian Indigenous languages have been claimed to operate somewhat differently in terms of prosodically conditioned consonant lengthening and strengthening. Consonants have been found to lengthen after a vowel bearing a phrasal pitch accent. It is further claimed that this post-tonic position is a position of prosodic strength in Australian languages. In this study, we investigate the effects of proximity to a phrasal pitch accent and prosodic constituent boundaries on the duration of stop and nasal consonants in words of varying lengths in Dja...
Prestopping of nasals is a phonological phenomenon which occurs as a product of late velum lowering ...
An automated method is presented for the commensurable, reproducible measurement of duration and len...
Closure duration has been established cross linguistically as the universally most reliable and cons...
© 2019 Kathleen Margaret JepsonThis thesis is an investigation of the phonetics of prosodic structur...
Substantial research has established that place of articulation of stop consonants (labial, alveolar...
This study investigates the segmental lengthening patterns resulting from prosodic boundaries in Tsw...
Words in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utterance-medial words, as ...
Pausing in speech allows a speaker to plan for the upcoming utterance, as well as to indicate to the...
© 2013 Dr. Hywel Martin StoakesThis thesis is an acoustic and physiological phonetic analysis of the...
[Extract] At the beginning of his seminal review of the phonological characteristics of Australian l...
The purpose of the present paper is to extend the previous findings on the prosodic boundary effects...
The present study investigates the acoustic differentiation of three coronal stops in the indigenous...
This paper examines the prosodic encoding of sentence types in Jaminjung, a language of Northern Aus...
This thesis is a descriptive and theoretical analysis of distributional co-occurrence constraints on...
Pre-stopping is a widespread and usually non-contrastive phenomenon in Australian languages. Contras...
Prestopping of nasals is a phonological phenomenon which occurs as a product of late velum lowering ...
An automated method is presented for the commensurable, reproducible measurement of duration and len...
Closure duration has been established cross linguistically as the universally most reliable and cons...
© 2019 Kathleen Margaret JepsonThis thesis is an investigation of the phonetics of prosodic structur...
Substantial research has established that place of articulation of stop consonants (labial, alveolar...
This study investigates the segmental lengthening patterns resulting from prosodic boundaries in Tsw...
Words in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utterance-medial words, as ...
Pausing in speech allows a speaker to plan for the upcoming utterance, as well as to indicate to the...
© 2013 Dr. Hywel Martin StoakesThis thesis is an acoustic and physiological phonetic analysis of the...
[Extract] At the beginning of his seminal review of the phonological characteristics of Australian l...
The purpose of the present paper is to extend the previous findings on the prosodic boundary effects...
The present study investigates the acoustic differentiation of three coronal stops in the indigenous...
This paper examines the prosodic encoding of sentence types in Jaminjung, a language of Northern Aus...
This thesis is a descriptive and theoretical analysis of distributional co-occurrence constraints on...
Pre-stopping is a widespread and usually non-contrastive phenomenon in Australian languages. Contras...
Prestopping of nasals is a phonological phenomenon which occurs as a product of late velum lowering ...
An automated method is presented for the commensurable, reproducible measurement of duration and len...
Closure duration has been established cross linguistically as the universally most reliable and cons...