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pro vyhledávání: '"Mary Pearce"'
Autor:
Mary Pearce, Sam Hellmuth
This chapter provides an overview of the prosodic systems of languages spoken in North Africa and the Middle East, taking in North Africa and the Horn of Africa, plus the Arabian Peninsula, and the Middle East (but excluding Kurdish). The survey sket
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::3679a6387b5fe6f12925d85335060813
https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198832232.013.12
https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198832232.013.12
Autor:
Mary Pearce, Timothy Kempton
Publikováno v:
Proceedings of the Annual Meetings on Phonology. 8
Corpus phonetics is enabling the comprehensive analysis of large digital speech collections. In this paper, we develop a corpus phonetics workflow that is flexible enough to be easily applied to under-documented languages. To test the capabilities of
Autor:
Mary Pearce
Publikováno v:
Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World.
Autor:
Mary Pearce
Publikováno v:
Linguistic Variation. 12:292-320
The reduction of vowels is a popular topic for research, but little has been said about the effects of vowel harmony on vowel reduction. Gendrot and Adda-Decker (2006, 2007) claim that phonetic reduction is linked to the phonetic duration of the vowe
Autor:
Mary Pearce
Publikováno v:
Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 41:249-258
Kera is an Eastern Chadic language spoken by about 50,000 people in southwestern Chad, south of the town of Fianga, and in major towns of Cameroon and Chad. Most Kera speakers would claim to speak a standard variety of Kera although there is some var
Autor:
Mary Pearce
Publikováno v:
Lingua. 119:846-864
This paper sets out to investigate the relative role of Voice Onset Time (VOT) and fundamental frequency in a language with lexical tone. By comparing English and the Chadic language Kera, this study explores the interaction between the production an
Autor:
Mary Pearce
Publikováno v:
Phonology. 23:259-286
This paper examines the cues for and interaction between the metrical and tonal systems of Kera. Kera has no word-level stress, but the heads of its quantity-sensitive iambic feet are cued by duration, intensity and vowel allophony; in addition, foot
Autor:
Mary Pearce
Publikováno v:
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 119:3269-3269
Previous research on production data from Kera (a Chadic tone language) has shown that tone plays a major contrastive role, whereas VOT has a lesser role which could indicate an ‘‘enhancing’’ relationship. This paper investigates the roles of