International audienceWe analyzed the realizations of French voiced fricatives /,Ʒ/ by German non-native and French native speakers, in final position of an accentual group, a position where German fricatives are devoiced. Three speaker levels (from beginners to advanced speakers) and different boundary types (depending on whether the fricative is followed by a pause, a schwa, or is directly followed by the first phoneme of the subsequent group), are considered. A set of cues, among which periodicity, fricative duration, and intensity in low frequencies, is used for voicing analysis. Results show that German realizations vary significantly with language, speakers’ level and boundary type, and argue in favor of an influence of L1 (German) f...
International audienceFrench and German differ with respect to the representation and implementation...
International audienceWe examined the "segmental intonation" hypothesis (Niebuhr, 2012), according t...
The acoustic-phonetic properties of words spoken with three different levels of accentuation (de-acc...
International audienceWe analyzed the realizations of French voiced fricatives /,Ʒ/ by German non-na...
International audienceWe analyzed the realizations of French voiced fricatives /,Ʒ/ by German learn...
International audienceFrench L2 Learners of German (FG) often replace the palatal fricative /ç/ abse...
International audienceWe analyze voicing in sequences of obstruents with French as L1 and German as ...
International audienceThis study quantifies “final devoicing” (FD) in largescale corpora of Standard...
International audienceVoicing assimilations inside groups of obstruents occur in opposite directions...
The use of acoustic properties by French and German speakers in accentuating and de-accentuating wor...
The aim of this paper is to provide an acoustical account of penultimate accentuation in some variet...
Phonatory behavior of German speakers (GS) and French speakers (FS) in native (L1) and non-native (L...
International audienceThe pronunciation of a foreign language is not an intuitive task to accomplish...
International audienceDeviations in L2 intonation affect a number of prosodic characteristics includ...
International audienceThe French Learners Audio Corpus of German Speech (FLACGS) was recorded to stu...
International audienceFrench and German differ with respect to the representation and implementation...
International audienceWe examined the "segmental intonation" hypothesis (Niebuhr, 2012), according t...
The acoustic-phonetic properties of words spoken with three different levels of accentuation (de-acc...
International audienceWe analyzed the realizations of French voiced fricatives /,Ʒ/ by German non-na...
International audienceWe analyzed the realizations of French voiced fricatives /,Ʒ/ by German learn...
International audienceFrench L2 Learners of German (FG) often replace the palatal fricative /ç/ abse...
International audienceWe analyze voicing in sequences of obstruents with French as L1 and German as ...
International audienceThis study quantifies “final devoicing” (FD) in largescale corpora of Standard...
International audienceVoicing assimilations inside groups of obstruents occur in opposite directions...
The use of acoustic properties by French and German speakers in accentuating and de-accentuating wor...
The aim of this paper is to provide an acoustical account of penultimate accentuation in some variet...
Phonatory behavior of German speakers (GS) and French speakers (FS) in native (L1) and non-native (L...
International audienceThe pronunciation of a foreign language is not an intuitive task to accomplish...
International audienceDeviations in L2 intonation affect a number of prosodic characteristics includ...
International audienceThe French Learners Audio Corpus of German Speech (FLACGS) was recorded to stu...
International audienceFrench and German differ with respect to the representation and implementation...
International audienceWe examined the "segmental intonation" hypothesis (Niebuhr, 2012), according t...
The acoustic-phonetic properties of words spoken with three different levels of accentuation (de-acc...