Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 45
pro vyhledávání: '"Kelly Berkson"'
Autor:
Stuart Davis, Kelly Berkson
Publikováno v:
The Publication of the American Dialect Society. 106:1-12
Publikováno v:
The Publication of the American Dialect Society. 106:63-94
Publikováno v:
Indiana Working Papers in South Asian Languages and Cultures. 3
This squib presents a basic overview of the vowel sounds in Hnaring Lutuv.
Publikováno v:
Indiana Working Papers in South Asian Languages and Cultures. 3
This squib presents the consonant inventory of Hnaring Lutuv.
Autor:
Kelly Berkson, Sui Hnem Par
Publikováno v:
Indiana Working Papers in South Asian Languages and Cultures. 3
This paper introduces the current volume of short papers (or squibs), which themselves provide basic overviews of several linguistic phenomena in Lutuv. Also known as Lautu, Lutuv is a member of the Maraic sub-group of the South Central branch of Tib
Publikováno v:
American Speech. 95:149-172
This article addresses incipient/aI/-raising in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Acoustic analysis of word list data from 27 participants targets both typical items (e.g., write, writing) and monomorphemic trochaic words often overlooked in previous research (e.
Publikováno v:
Journal of South Asian Languages and Linguistics. 6:215-243
Across languages, the acoustic and articulatory correlates of breathiness are similar whether they are associated with consonants or with vowels. This raises the question of whether breathy consonants are confusable with breathy vowels in languages i
Autor:
Kelly Berkson, Stuart Davis, Samson Alexander Lotven, Jillian Danaher, Kenneth Van Bik, James Christian Wamsley
Publikováno v:
Journal of South Asian Languages and Linguistics. 6:281-308
The Kuki-Chin group of the Tibeto-Burman language family consists of upwards of 50 languages spoken mainly in western Myanmar, predominantly in Chin State and in neighboring areas of India and Bangladesh (Simons & Fennig (eds.). 2019. Ethnologue: Lan
Autor:
Kelly Berkson
Publikováno v:
Journal of Phonetics. 73:70-90
Breathy voiced sonorant consonants are typologically rare, more so than other non-modal sonorants (e.g. voiceless sonorants, which are widely attested in language families like Tibeto-Burman and Otomanguean). Similarly, they are more vulnerable to di
Publikováno v:
Journal of Phonetics. 71:410-424
Ultrasound is increasingly common in speech and phonetics research as technology continues to improve. The first digital 3D/4D ultrasound system was utilized for speech research nearly a decade ago, but data access, processing, and visualization were