Abstract
Reporting the results of an instrumental acoustic examination
of the vowel systems of ten Jamaican Creole (or basilect-) dominant
and nine Jamaican English (or acrolect-) dominant speakers,
this article links phonetic features with sociolinguistic factors.
The nature and relative role of vowel quantity and quality
differences in phonemic contrast are considered. The question
of whether contrastive length operates in speakers' phonological
systems is addressed by comparison of spectral and temporal features.
Intraspeaker variation in vowel quality is found to play an important
role in stylistic variation, demonstrating the complexity of variation
in Jamaican varieties. The complex vowel quality (spectral)
and quantity (temporal) relations reported here extend our
understanding of the spectral and temporal characteristics of
vowels involved in phonological contrasts in Jamaican varieties,
the range of phonetic variation to be found within a postcreole
continuum, and the interaction of phonetic factors in the
expression of stylistic variation.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Education,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
18 articles.
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