Affrication as the cause of /s/-retraction: Evidence from Manchester English

Author:

Bailey George1ORCID,Nichols Stephen2ORCID,Turton Danielle3ORCID,Baranowski Maciej4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of York Language and Linguistic Science

2. University of Oxford

3. Lancaster University

4. University of Manchester

Abstract

Retraction of /s/ to a more [ʃ]-like sound is a well-known sound change attested across many varieties of English for /stɹ/ words, e.g. street and strong. Despite recent sociophonetic interest in the variable, there remains disagreement over whether it represents a case of long-distance assimilation to /ɹ/ in these clusters or a two-step process involving local assimilation to an affricate derived from the sequence /tɹ/. In this paper, we investigate Manchester English and apply similar quantitative analysis to two contexts that are comparatively under-researched, but which allow us to tease apart the presence of an affricate and a rhotic: /stj/ as in student, which exhibits similar affrication of the /tj/ cluster in many varieties of British English, and /stʃ/ as in mischief. In an acoustic analysis conducted on a demographically-stratified corpus of over 115 sociolinguistic interviews, we track these three environments of /s/-retraction in apparent time and find that they change in parallel and behave in tandem with respect to the other factors conditioning variation in /s/-retraction. Based on these results, we argue that the triggering mechanisms of retraction are best modelled with direct reference to /t/-affrication and with /ɹ/ playing only an indirect, and not unique, role. Analysis of the whole sibilant space also reveals apparent-time change in the magnitude of the /s/–/ʃ/ contrast itself, highlighting the importance of contextualising this change with respect to the realisation of English sibilants more generally as these may be undergoing independent change.

Publisher

Open Library of the Humanities

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference80 articles.

1. Ahlers, Wiebke. 2020. Palatization in Austin. A sociophonetic analysis of sibilants. Osnabrück: Universität Osnabrück dissertation.

2. Sibilant variation in New Englishes: A comparative sociophonetic study of Trinidadian and American English /s(tr)/-retraction;Ahlers, WiebkeMeer, Philipp;Proceedings of Interspeech 2019,2019

3. Variability in American English sretraction suggests a solution to the actuation problem;Baker, AdamArchangeli, DianaMielke, Jeff;Language Variation and Change,2011

4. Class matters: The sociolinguistics of GOOSE and GOAT in Manchester English;Baranowski, Maciej;Language Variation and Change,2017

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