Abstract
Abstract
We analyse articulation rate and speech rate, number and duration of pauses for 22 speakers of two regional
varieties of Spanish (Madrilenian vs Mexican) in three different tasks (reading, picture description and interview). Our results
show that speakers from Madrid have higher articulation rate and speech rate than speakers from Mexico, but that such differences
are mainly observed in spontaneous speech (picture description). Instead, the number and duration of pauses were not significantly
affected by the origin of speakers. Some methodological issues are discussed in order to make legitimate inferences from this
exploratory study.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics