This paper presents data concerning differences in segment duration in Standard Danish due to syllable number, position in the utterance and (based on a very restricted material) syntactic boundaries and word boundaries. It is shown that the tendency to shortening of stressed vowels according to number of following syllables which has been found in many languages, is not valid for Danish, which, on the contrary, has vowel lengthening in disyllables of the type CVCə compared to monosyllables. The historical and dialectal background of this phenomenon is discussed. It is further shown that Danish has final lengthening, although of less magnitude than e.g. English, and that word ...
In contrast to the traditional treatment of Frisian vowel quantity as phonologically relevant, it is...
Three questions in the analysis of Danish stød are addressed. (1) We try and establish an acoustic r...
This paper studies the effect of the regional background of listeners on vowel perception. In German...
The recordings which formed the basis of Fischer-Jørgensen "Segmental duration of Danish words in&nb...
The present article is a follow-up to the paper by Kuz’menko Yu. K. (2017) about the shortening of ...
This paper argues that the Danish coda consonants in kat and tal or the intervocalic obstruents in k...
This paper argues that the Danish coda consonants in kat and tal or the intervocalic obstruents in k...
Three questions in the analysis of Danish stød are ad-dressed. (1) Vowels with stød are phonological...
This paper presents some facts about the duration of closure and open interval in Danish stop c...
This investigation compares articulation rates of phonological and phonetic syllables in Norwegian, ...
Current research in typology has shown that durational effects at the phonetic level can have a prof...
The article investigates variation in the duration of the pronunciation of the Danish adverb egentli...
A difference in prepausal lengthening was found when the unscripted speech of Estonians living in Sw...
This paper presents a phonological analysis of a glottalization phenomenon in dialects of Danish kno...
Temporal effects of focusing have been investigated in two-syllable and longer Swedish words. Words ...
In contrast to the traditional treatment of Frisian vowel quantity as phonologically relevant, it is...
Three questions in the analysis of Danish stød are addressed. (1) We try and establish an acoustic r...
This paper studies the effect of the regional background of listeners on vowel perception. In German...
The recordings which formed the basis of Fischer-Jørgensen "Segmental duration of Danish words in&nb...
The present article is a follow-up to the paper by Kuz’menko Yu. K. (2017) about the shortening of ...
This paper argues that the Danish coda consonants in kat and tal or the intervocalic obstruents in k...
This paper argues that the Danish coda consonants in kat and tal or the intervocalic obstruents in k...
Three questions in the analysis of Danish stød are ad-dressed. (1) Vowels with stød are phonological...
This paper presents some facts about the duration of closure and open interval in Danish stop c...
This investigation compares articulation rates of phonological and phonetic syllables in Norwegian, ...
Current research in typology has shown that durational effects at the phonetic level can have a prof...
The article investigates variation in the duration of the pronunciation of the Danish adverb egentli...
A difference in prepausal lengthening was found when the unscripted speech of Estonians living in Sw...
This paper presents a phonological analysis of a glottalization phenomenon in dialects of Danish kno...
Temporal effects of focusing have been investigated in two-syllable and longer Swedish words. Words ...
In contrast to the traditional treatment of Frisian vowel quantity as phonologically relevant, it is...
Three questions in the analysis of Danish stød are addressed. (1) We try and establish an acoustic r...
This paper studies the effect of the regional background of listeners on vowel perception. In German...