Hiatus resolution and linguistic diversity in Australian English

Author:

Penney Joshua1ORCID,Cox Felicity1,Gibson Andy2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Linguistics, Centre for Language Sciences , Macquarie University , Sydney , NSW , Australia

2. Department of Linguistics , Queen Mary, University of London , London , UK

Abstract

Abstract Vowel hiatus is typically resolved in Australian English through complementary strategies of liaison (j-gliding/w-gliding/linking-r) and glottalisation. Previous work suggests a change in progress towards increased use of glottalisation as an optimal hiatus-breaker, which creates syntagmatic contrast between adjacent vowels, particularly when the right-edge vowel is strong (i.e. at the foot boundary). Liaison continues to be used when right-edge vowels are weak, but glottalisation as a hiatus resolution strategy in general appears to be increasing and may be more common in speakers from non-English speaking backgrounds raising the question of whether exposure to linguistic diversity could be driving the change. We examine hiatus resolution in speakers from neighbourhoods that vary according to levels of language diversity. We elicited gliding and linking-r hiatus contexts to determine how prosodic strength of flanking vowels and speakers’ exposure to linguistic diversity affect hiatus resolution. Results confirm that glottalisation occurs most frequently with strong right-edge vowels, and gliding/linking-r are more likely with weak right-edge vowels. However, strategies differ between gliding and linking-r contexts, suggesting differing implementation mechanisms. In addition, speakers from ethnolinguistically diverse areas produce increased glottalisation in all contexts supporting the idea that change to the hiatus resolution system may be driven by language contact.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Reference73 articles.

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2. Allerton, David J. 2000. Articulatory inertia vs. ‘Systemzwang’: Changes in liaison phenomena in recent British English. English Studies 81(6). 574–581. https://doi.org/10.1076/enst.81.6.574.9183.

3. Australian Bureau of Statistics. 2016a. Pittwater 2016 census all persons quickstats. https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/people/people-and-communities/snapshot-australia/2021 (accessed 20 June 2023).

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5. Australian Bureau of Statistics. 2021. Snapshot of Australia. https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/people/people-and-communities/snapshot-australia/2021 (accessed 16 May 2023).

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