Francoprovençal (FP) is a highly fragmented, severely endangered, and under-documented language spoken in parts of France, Italy and Switzerland. FP spoken in the Swiss Canton of Valais has a relatively rich voiceless fricative inventory, which for some varieties includes /ɬ/. FP is therefore unusual amongst Romance languages given the presence of a phonemic lateral fricative, which is also typologically rare in the world’s languages. Moreover, voiceless lateral fricatives have been reported to display a wide range of variation in acoustic properties cross-linguistically. To date, there is very little synchronic work examining the details of both the phonology and phonetics of FP, and no published acoustic work at all on any aspect of FP’s ...
International audienceThis study quantifies “final devoicing” (FD) in largescale corpora of Standard...
This study compares results obtained from analyses of spontaneous and controlled speech in the diale...
Fricatives are found in all world languages (Maddieson 1984:41). Similarities in mouth geometry and ...
Are voiceless approximants categorically distinct from voiceless fricatives? We address this questio...
Tuscan Italian is characterized by the spirantization of voiceless stops. This process has been well...
This paper presents the results of a first acoustic phonetic investigation into voiceless spirantiza...
This paper presents the results of a first acoustic phonetic investigation into voiceless spirantiza...
This preliminary study focuses on the acoustic characteristics of two competing fricative variants o...
International audienceWe examined the "segmental intonation" hypothesis (Niebuhr, 2012), according t...
Welsh, a Celtic language spoken in Wales, is unusual amongst the languages of the world in having a ...
The production of fricatives is not yet fully understood because the mechanismis particularly comple...
The aim of this study is to verify acoustically the extent to which the traditionally acknowledged l...
In this study I present a productive and perceptive analysis of the voiced and voiceless alveopalata...
Several studies have explored the acoustic structure of fricatives, yet there has been very little a...
International audienceAcoustic descriptions of the realizations of the French sound represented by t...
International audienceThis study quantifies “final devoicing” (FD) in largescale corpora of Standard...
This study compares results obtained from analyses of spontaneous and controlled speech in the diale...
Fricatives are found in all world languages (Maddieson 1984:41). Similarities in mouth geometry and ...
Are voiceless approximants categorically distinct from voiceless fricatives? We address this questio...
Tuscan Italian is characterized by the spirantization of voiceless stops. This process has been well...
This paper presents the results of a first acoustic phonetic investigation into voiceless spirantiza...
This paper presents the results of a first acoustic phonetic investigation into voiceless spirantiza...
This preliminary study focuses on the acoustic characteristics of two competing fricative variants o...
International audienceWe examined the "segmental intonation" hypothesis (Niebuhr, 2012), according t...
Welsh, a Celtic language spoken in Wales, is unusual amongst the languages of the world in having a ...
The production of fricatives is not yet fully understood because the mechanismis particularly comple...
The aim of this study is to verify acoustically the extent to which the traditionally acknowledged l...
In this study I present a productive and perceptive analysis of the voiced and voiceless alveopalata...
Several studies have explored the acoustic structure of fricatives, yet there has been very little a...
International audienceAcoustic descriptions of the realizations of the French sound represented by t...
International audienceThis study quantifies “final devoicing” (FD) in largescale corpora of Standard...
This study compares results obtained from analyses of spontaneous and controlled speech in the diale...
Fricatives are found in all world languages (Maddieson 1984:41). Similarities in mouth geometry and ...