This article reports a study of acoustic phonetic variation between ethnic groups in the realisation of the British English liquids /l/ and /ɹ/. Data are presented from ‘Anglo’ and ‘Asian’ native speakers of Sheffield English. Sheffield Anglo English is typically described as having ‘dark’ /l/, but there is some disagreement in the literature. British Asian speakers, on the other hand, are often described as producing much ‘clearer’ realisations of /l/, but the specific differences between varieties may vary by geographical location. Regression analysis of liquid steady states and Smoothing Spline ANOVAs of vocalic-liquid formant trajectories show consistent F2-F1 differences in /l/ between Anglo and Asian speakers in non-final contexts, wh...
This article considers dialect contact and second-dialect acquisition by adult and child Barbadian E...
This article is a study investigating acoustic characteristics of American English liquids produced ...
Past research on Singapore English (SgE) has shown that there are specific segmental and prosodic pa...
Previous auditory and acoustic research reports variation in /l/ between ‘Asian’ and ‘Anglo’ speaker...
In this paper we present a production study designed to explore the relationship between three obser...
The phenomenon of /l/-darkening has been a subject of linguistic interest due to the remarkable amou...
This study analyses the time-varying acoustics of laterals and their adjacent vowels in Manchester a...
The phenomenon of /l/-darkening has been a subject of linguistic interest due to the remarkable amou...
This paper investigates the acoustic evidence for real-time change in word-final liquids (/r/ and /l...
Allophonic patterns of variation in English laterals have been well studied in phonetics and phonolo...
This paper investigates the acoustic evidence for real-time change in word-final liquids (/r/ an...
Synchronic variability in the area of phonetics, phonology, vocabulary, morphology and syntax is a n...
This study attempts to challenge the monolithic representation of race and ethnicity in multicultura...
This article investigates the acoustic and articulatory correlates of vowel contrasts in bilingual s...
This study took up a socio-phonetic investigation among Chinese learners of English by comparing Eng...
This article considers dialect contact and second-dialect acquisition by adult and child Barbadian E...
This article is a study investigating acoustic characteristics of American English liquids produced ...
Past research on Singapore English (SgE) has shown that there are specific segmental and prosodic pa...
Previous auditory and acoustic research reports variation in /l/ between ‘Asian’ and ‘Anglo’ speaker...
In this paper we present a production study designed to explore the relationship between three obser...
The phenomenon of /l/-darkening has been a subject of linguistic interest due to the remarkable amou...
This study analyses the time-varying acoustics of laterals and their adjacent vowels in Manchester a...
The phenomenon of /l/-darkening has been a subject of linguistic interest due to the remarkable amou...
This paper investigates the acoustic evidence for real-time change in word-final liquids (/r/ and /l...
Allophonic patterns of variation in English laterals have been well studied in phonetics and phonolo...
This paper investigates the acoustic evidence for real-time change in word-final liquids (/r/ an...
Synchronic variability in the area of phonetics, phonology, vocabulary, morphology and syntax is a n...
This study attempts to challenge the monolithic representation of race and ethnicity in multicultura...
This article investigates the acoustic and articulatory correlates of vowel contrasts in bilingual s...
This study took up a socio-phonetic investigation among Chinese learners of English by comparing Eng...
This article considers dialect contact and second-dialect acquisition by adult and child Barbadian E...
This article is a study investigating acoustic characteristics of American English liquids produced ...
Past research on Singapore English (SgE) has shown that there are specific segmental and prosodic pa...