Edge strengthening and phonetic variability in Spanish /l/: an ultrasound study

Author:

Ramsammy Michael1ORCID,King Matthew1

Affiliation:

1. School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences, University of Edinburgh , Edinburgh , UK

Abstract

AbstractPrevious research has shown that /l/ in Spanish displays patterns of articulatory variability that are determined by a complex interaction of phonetic, phonological and dialectal factors. In this study, we report the results of an experiment using Ultrasound Tongue Imaging (UTI) that tests /l/-articulations in a dialectal cross-section of Spanish speakers. We show that lengthening of /l/ in phrase-edge contexts is accompanied by articulatory distinctions (e.g. root/dorsum retraction) for some speakers, whereas others produce lengthened realisations of /l/ in these contexts without observable differences in tongue position. We also find acoustic evidence for reduction in utterance-medial intervocalic and preconsonantal environments (duration, intensity, F1 frequency measures are discussed). However, articulatory correlates of reduction are not consistently observed across speakers in these contexts. As well as relating the results to prosodically-driven strengthening and reduction patterns, our findings are of relevance to debates about resyllabification in Spanish. Specifically, we argue that our results cannot be straightforwardly accommodated under phonological analysis assuming that word-final consonants regularly resyllabify across word boundaries prevocalically.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Acoustics and Ultrasonics,Language and Linguistics

Reference103 articles.

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3. Bermúdez-Otero, Ricardo. 2011. Cyclicity. In Marc van Oostendorp, Colin Ewen, Elizabeth Hume & Keren Rice (eds.), The Blackwell companion to phonology, 2019–2048. Malden, M.A.: Wiley-Blackwell.

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5. Bradley, Travis G. 1999. Assibilation in Ecuadorian Spanish. In J. Marc Authier, Barbara E. Bullock & Lisa A. Reed (eds.), Formal perspectives on Romance Linguistics: Selected papers from the 28th Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages (LSRL XXVIII), 57–71. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

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