Author:
Cooper William E.,Danly Martha
Abstract
Abstract
Two experiments were conducted to examine the manner in which utterance-final lengthening is exhibited by the durations of words containing various fricatives and vowels in different phonetic environments. In experiment 1, utterance-final lengthening was measured for words containing the fricatives /f/, /v/, /s/, and /z/ in word-initial, word-medial, and word-final positions in both phrase-final and utterance-final locations. The results showed small amounts of utterance-final lengthening for words containing fricatives in word-initial and word-medial positions, with much greater elongation when fricatives appeared in word-final position. In experiment 2, utterance-final lengthening was measured for words containing a word-medial long versus short vowel followed by a word-final voiced versus voiceless stop consonant. The results showed a greater amount of utterance-final lengthening for words containing a terminal voiced versus voiceless stop. The findings are discussed in terms of constraints on the speaker’s programming of segment durations in sentence contexts.
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Acoustics and Ultrasonics,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
36 articles.
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