Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1100855 | Journal of Phonetics | 2009 | 20 Pages |
Abstract
This study examined the elastic behaviour of segment durations in Northern Finnish CVC2V and CVC2C3V nonsense words produced in a constant frame sentence. The identities of C2 and C3 were systematically varied, and the identities of the other segments were fully counterbalanced. In the CVC2V words, the three consonants in the C2 position exhibited systematic differences in their intrinsic durations, whereas in the CVC2C3V items they did not, and their durations were reliably longer than in the CVC2V items. The two consonants in the C3 position in the CVC2C3V items also exhibited an intrinsic durational difference. For the (phonologically single) vowels in the target word structures, four complementary degrees of vowel duration were observed, with a distribution determined by the vowel's moraically defined structural position in the word. Where consonants exhibited intrinsic or other durational differences, these differences were usually counteracted by compensatory shortening of another segment in the word. A locus of duration-to-tone adjustments is postulated that consists of the word's first mora and the next two segments one of which is the word's second mora. As a result of the elastic behaviour, the locus tends to have constant duration across different word structures, and it ensures the tonally and temporally uniform realisation of accent, a characteristic that seems to distinguish Northern Finnish from many other languages. These and other, previous durational findings in (Northern) Finnish are related to a recent model of speech timing.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities
Arts and Humanities
Language and Linguistics
Authors
Kari Suomi,