Partial voicing neutralization in unstressed stop-nasal sequences

Authors

  • A. Munteanu McGill University, Canada
  • Y. Kim Universite de Montreal, Canada
  • K. Li McGill University, Canada
  • B. LeBrun McGill University, Canada
  • S. Livolsi McGill University, Canada
  • J. Mundie McGill University, Canada

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31926/but.pcs.2024.66.17.2.1

Keywords:

phonological contrast, phonetic cues, functional load, voicing

Abstract

We present the results of a production experiment that explores the realization of voicing in English stop-nasal sequences, a phonological environment with a low functional load. The results imply a separation between primary and secondary voicing cues. Primary cues – aspiration and vocal fold vibration during stop closure – robustly distinguish underlyingly voiced stops from and underlyingly voiceless ones. Meanwhile, secondary cues – vowel duration and stop closure duration – are limited in their use by phonological position or absent entirely. A principal component analysis of the data indicates that all speakers occasionally produce tokens that are ambiguous in voicing cues.

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Published

2024-12-12

Issue

Section

LANGUAGE STUDIES