Some dialects of Vallo di Diano, in southern Campania (Italy), display variation in final unstressed position between four full final vowels -[i e a o] and a single centralized final vowel -[@]. In this paper we will discuss experimental data from three varieties of that area, those of Polla, S. Pietro al Tanagro and Sanza, and argue that variation in the quality of final unstressed vowels is best interpreted in terms of an interaction between a basilectal, Tuscan-like final vowel system -/i e a o/ and the Neapolitan-based koine variety in which all final unstressed vowels merged to -/@/. The choice of this interpretation over conceivable alternatives, as we will show, is favoured by a combination of system-internal reconstructive considera...
The Romance dialects spoken in Veneto, North-East of Italy, have been described as possessing ‘lilti...
Vowels All dialects have a basic five-vowel system with simple neutralization of the Latin length di...
In Florentine Italian high vowels /i/ and /u/ occur before a velar nasal instead of the expected /e/...
International audienceSome dialects of Vallo di Diano, in southern Campania (Italy), display variati...
International audienceThe article shows how dialectology can benefit from concepts imported from soc...
This paper examines a particular kind of phonetic variation observed in the realization of articles ...
This paper deals with the non-systematic voicing of intervocalic sj in Old Tuscan. Old Tuscan displa...
Empirical evidence from dialects of northern Calabria and southern Basilicata challenges the general...
International audienceFor this poster session, I will focus on two dialects of the area, a Piemontes...
International audienceVowel reduction may involve phonetic reduction processes, with non reached tar...
Although there exists an acknowledged Standard Italian, both taught in the educational system and us...
The Italian language is characterized by an extremely strong phonetic and phonological variation tha...
International audienceFor this poster session, I will focus on two dialects of the area, a Piemontes...
In the last two decades the literature has described the intonation of several varieties of spoken I...
157 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1984.This dissertation is meant to...
The Romance dialects spoken in Veneto, North-East of Italy, have been described as possessing ‘lilti...
Vowels All dialects have a basic five-vowel system with simple neutralization of the Latin length di...
In Florentine Italian high vowels /i/ and /u/ occur before a velar nasal instead of the expected /e/...
International audienceSome dialects of Vallo di Diano, in southern Campania (Italy), display variati...
International audienceThe article shows how dialectology can benefit from concepts imported from soc...
This paper examines a particular kind of phonetic variation observed in the realization of articles ...
This paper deals with the non-systematic voicing of intervocalic sj in Old Tuscan. Old Tuscan displa...
Empirical evidence from dialects of northern Calabria and southern Basilicata challenges the general...
International audienceFor this poster session, I will focus on two dialects of the area, a Piemontes...
International audienceVowel reduction may involve phonetic reduction processes, with non reached tar...
Although there exists an acknowledged Standard Italian, both taught in the educational system and us...
The Italian language is characterized by an extremely strong phonetic and phonological variation tha...
International audienceFor this poster session, I will focus on two dialects of the area, a Piemontes...
In the last two decades the literature has described the intonation of several varieties of spoken I...
157 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1984.This dissertation is meant to...
The Romance dialects spoken in Veneto, North-East of Italy, have been described as possessing ‘lilti...
Vowels All dialects have a basic five-vowel system with simple neutralization of the Latin length di...
In Florentine Italian high vowels /i/ and /u/ occur before a velar nasal instead of the expected /e/...