Structural change in a language are considered nearly inevitable consequences of language death (Campbell and Muntzel 1989; Wolfram 2002). The literature on sound change in endangered languages has focused on whether the changes are internally or externally motivated, and, therefore, the difference between categorical sound shifts and gradient phonetic effects has been overlooked (cf. Campbell and Muntzel 1989; Woolard 1989; Dorian 1993). In addition, this research has been largely impressionistic in nature, leaving subtle variation that is beyond the scope of narrow transcription out of the discussion (Schmidt 1985; Goodfellow 2005) This paper discusses sound change in Mono Lake Northern Paiute – an American Indian language spoken in Calif...
Individual variability in sound change was explored at three stages of final vowel reduction and los...
This paper analyzes the variable production of the Pennsylvania German diphthong /aɪ/ in two Pennsyl...
While much research on sound change in progress has focused on phonemic mergers (loss of phonologica...
Structural change in a language are considered nearly inevitable consequences of language death (Cam...
Sound changes in a language are considered nearly inevitable consequences of language death. The lit...
The literature on variation in endangered languages has largely focused on the structural and styli...
This dissertation compares the phonetic and phonological features of adult non-speakers' productions...
Studies of language changes and their approaches are surveyed in this study. Among the changes, vowe...
In this essay, I highlight the important role of endangered language documentation and description i...
Variation in language is constant and inevitable. In a vital speech community some variation disappe...
Studies have often documented an increase in variation and frequency of change in communities underg...
This dissertation addresses the broad question about how phonology and phonetics are interrelated, s...
This dissertation addresses the broad question about how phonology and phonetics are interrelated, s...
While some sound changes occur in environments defined in purely phonological terms, others may beco...
Contrary to Labov’s Principle of style shifting, studies in language obsolescence portray speakers o...
Individual variability in sound change was explored at three stages of final vowel reduction and los...
This paper analyzes the variable production of the Pennsylvania German diphthong /aɪ/ in two Pennsyl...
While much research on sound change in progress has focused on phonemic mergers (loss of phonologica...
Structural change in a language are considered nearly inevitable consequences of language death (Cam...
Sound changes in a language are considered nearly inevitable consequences of language death. The lit...
The literature on variation in endangered languages has largely focused on the structural and styli...
This dissertation compares the phonetic and phonological features of adult non-speakers' productions...
Studies of language changes and their approaches are surveyed in this study. Among the changes, vowe...
In this essay, I highlight the important role of endangered language documentation and description i...
Variation in language is constant and inevitable. In a vital speech community some variation disappe...
Studies have often documented an increase in variation and frequency of change in communities underg...
This dissertation addresses the broad question about how phonology and phonetics are interrelated, s...
This dissertation addresses the broad question about how phonology and phonetics are interrelated, s...
While some sound changes occur in environments defined in purely phonological terms, others may beco...
Contrary to Labov’s Principle of style shifting, studies in language obsolescence portray speakers o...
Individual variability in sound change was explored at three stages of final vowel reduction and los...
This paper analyzes the variable production of the Pennsylvania German diphthong /aɪ/ in two Pennsyl...
While much research on sound change in progress has focused on phonemic mergers (loss of phonologica...