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2009 | 45 | 1 | 103-129

Article title

Inertial and Non-Inertial Lenition Processes

Selected contents from this journal

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
This study aims at determining the influence of vocal tract inertia on the following lenition processes: phonetic vowel reduction, vowel deletion, spirantisation, place assimilation and consonant cluster simplification. Since speech has to be realised within the limits imposed on the speaker by the physical properties of the speech apparatus, even universally preferred sound combinations, i.e. strings of CV syllables, can constitute an articulatory difficulty at fast rates due to the inertia of the active speech organ. Under such circumstances, speakers of various languages frequently apply lenitions that are not employed in their language in natural speech and, most importantly, there are striking similarities in how certain difficulties are overcome. The major conclusion that can be drawn from the data is that lenitions affecting CVC and VCV sound sequences are inertial, whereas those affecting consonant clusters are non-inertial.

Keywords

Publisher

Year

Volume

45

Issue

1

Pages

103-129

Physical description

Dates

published
2009-03-01
online
2009-05-14

Contributors

  • University of Szczecin

References

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  • Ohala, J. 1997. "Comparison of speech sounds: Distance vs. cost metrics". In: Kiritani, S., H. Hirose and H. Fujisaki (eds.). 261-270.
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Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_2478_v10010-009-0006-6
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