Words in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utterance-medial words, as previous studies on individual languages have shown. This paper provides a systematic cross-linguistic comparison of relative durations of final and penultimate words in utterances in terms of the degree to which such words are lengthened. The study uses time-aligned corpora from 10 genealogically, areally, and culturally diverse languages, including eight small, under-resourced, and mostly endangered languages, as well as English and Dutch. Clear effects of lengthening words at the end of utterances are found in all 10 languages, but the degrees of lengthening vary. Languages also differ in the relative durations of words that precede uttera...
Segment prolongation has been shown to be one of the most common forms of non-pathological speech di...
Betz S, Wagner P. Disfluent Lengthening in Spontaneous Speech. In: Jokisch O, ed. Elektronische Spra...
Word-final syllables are known to show phonological strength, presumably due to final lengthening (S...
Words in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utterance-medial words, as ...
The phonological vowel and consonant length distinctions in languages such as Hungarian may provide ...
Published online: 13 March 2017It is widely accepted that duration can be exploited as phonological ...
This paper explores the application of quantitative methods to study the effect of various factors o...
The duration of speech segments as a function of position in utterances (initial, medial, final) was...
This study investigates the segmental lengthening patterns resulting from prosodic boundaries in Tsw...
Abstract In the present study lengthening in L1 Dutch and L2 English was explored. The first purpose...
Speech segments are lengthened at the onsets and offsets of linguistic constituents. Final-syllable ...
The present analysis examined the interactive effects of articulation rate and position in phrases a...
An experiment was carried out to examine the possibility of word-final F0 rise without lengthening i...
Cross-linguistically, segments typically lengthen because of proximity to prosodic events such as in...
Betz S, Eklund R, Wagner P. Prolongation in German. In: Eklund R, Rose R, eds. Proceedings of DiSS 2...
Segment prolongation has been shown to be one of the most common forms of non-pathological speech di...
Betz S, Wagner P. Disfluent Lengthening in Spontaneous Speech. In: Jokisch O, ed. Elektronische Spra...
Word-final syllables are known to show phonological strength, presumably due to final lengthening (S...
Words in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utterance-medial words, as ...
The phonological vowel and consonant length distinctions in languages such as Hungarian may provide ...
Published online: 13 March 2017It is widely accepted that duration can be exploited as phonological ...
This paper explores the application of quantitative methods to study the effect of various factors o...
The duration of speech segments as a function of position in utterances (initial, medial, final) was...
This study investigates the segmental lengthening patterns resulting from prosodic boundaries in Tsw...
Abstract In the present study lengthening in L1 Dutch and L2 English was explored. The first purpose...
Speech segments are lengthened at the onsets and offsets of linguistic constituents. Final-syllable ...
The present analysis examined the interactive effects of articulation rate and position in phrases a...
An experiment was carried out to examine the possibility of word-final F0 rise without lengthening i...
Cross-linguistically, segments typically lengthen because of proximity to prosodic events such as in...
Betz S, Eklund R, Wagner P. Prolongation in German. In: Eklund R, Rose R, eds. Proceedings of DiSS 2...
Segment prolongation has been shown to be one of the most common forms of non-pathological speech di...
Betz S, Wagner P. Disfluent Lengthening in Spontaneous Speech. In: Jokisch O, ed. Elektronische Spra...
Word-final syllables are known to show phonological strength, presumably due to final lengthening (S...