Lunden 2006 gave evidence from a production study with Norwegian speakers that shows there is a proportional relationship between V, the canonical light rhyme, and heavy syllable rhymes. The average proportional increase of a heavy rhyme over a light V rhyme was notably consistent across all positions. Crucially, a final VC rhyme did not reach the same proportional increase in a duration that a non-final VC or VXC did, as final lengthening disproportionally affected V-final rhymes. This poster presents an MFC experiment with Norwegian speakers that finds evidence from the perceptual side for the proportional increase theory of weight
Cross-linguistically, phonological weight systems can be quite complex. There are many factors to ta...
Many languages exploit suprasegmental devices in signaling word meaning. Tone languages exploit fund...
Segment-based syllable weight has been proposed to be calculated by either rhyme segments (McCarthy,...
Lunden 2006 gave evidence from a production study with Norwegian speakers that shows there is a prop...
Many languages, including Norwegian, exhibit CVC weight asymmetry: CVC is usually heavy but behaves...
Steriade (2012) proposed intervals as a more appropriate syllable weight domain than rhymes. This st...
Steriade (2012) proposed intervals as a more appropriate syllable weight domain than rhymes. This st...
Binary stress languages have a well-known asymmetry between their tolerance of initial versus final ...
Binary stress languages have a well-known asymmetry between their tolerance of initial versus final ...
Multiple languages avoid stressing the first of two vowels in hiatus. Evidence that this avoidance h...
While some accounts of syllable weight deny a role for onsets, onset-sensitive weight criteria have ...
1. Weight at the right edge Many languages exhibit a CVC weight asymmetry: (C)VC is considered a hea...
This study investigated the nature and acquisition of long consonants in Norwegian. By age 2;6 child...
Weight ordering preferences appear to function in opposite directions in verse and language. While l...
Word-final syllables are known to show phonological strength, presumably due to final lengthening (S...
Cross-linguistically, phonological weight systems can be quite complex. There are many factors to ta...
Many languages exploit suprasegmental devices in signaling word meaning. Tone languages exploit fund...
Segment-based syllable weight has been proposed to be calculated by either rhyme segments (McCarthy,...
Lunden 2006 gave evidence from a production study with Norwegian speakers that shows there is a prop...
Many languages, including Norwegian, exhibit CVC weight asymmetry: CVC is usually heavy but behaves...
Steriade (2012) proposed intervals as a more appropriate syllable weight domain than rhymes. This st...
Steriade (2012) proposed intervals as a more appropriate syllable weight domain than rhymes. This st...
Binary stress languages have a well-known asymmetry between their tolerance of initial versus final ...
Binary stress languages have a well-known asymmetry between their tolerance of initial versus final ...
Multiple languages avoid stressing the first of two vowels in hiatus. Evidence that this avoidance h...
While some accounts of syllable weight deny a role for onsets, onset-sensitive weight criteria have ...
1. Weight at the right edge Many languages exhibit a CVC weight asymmetry: (C)VC is considered a hea...
This study investigated the nature and acquisition of long consonants in Norwegian. By age 2;6 child...
Weight ordering preferences appear to function in opposite directions in verse and language. While l...
Word-final syllables are known to show phonological strength, presumably due to final lengthening (S...
Cross-linguistically, phonological weight systems can be quite complex. There are many factors to ta...
Many languages exploit suprasegmental devices in signaling word meaning. Tone languages exploit fund...
Segment-based syllable weight has been proposed to be calculated by either rhyme segments (McCarthy,...