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Abu-Salim, Issam M. – 1983
A purely segmental or suprasegmental analysis of vowel harmony in Arabic is inadequate because it leaves some questions unanswered. An approach based primarily on the metrical structure of the utterance and addressing an independent structural category, the "foot" of the word, that phonological rules may refer to, is preferred,…
Descriptors: Arabic, Language Research, Linguistic Theory, Linguistics
Odden, David – 1987
A nonlinear approach to phonology that is more constrained than linear theory is proposed. The theory disallows rules of feature changing, resulting in a stronger, more consistent, and more interesting theory. Specifically, it is suggested, and tested with data from Chukchi, that dissimilations and other nonassimilatory rules are rules of feature…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory, Phonology
Uber, Diane Ringer – 1989
Data was collected from 45-minute conversational interviews of 20 Cubans, who arrived in the United States in 1980, to analyze vocalic processes in Cuban Spanish. Four vocalic processes found in Cuban Spanish (raising and devoicing of unstressed vowels, lengthening of stressed vowels, and diphthongization of stressed mid vowels) were examined.…
Descriptors: Cubans, Interviews, Intonation, Language Research

Stoel-Gammon, Carol; Cooper, Judith A. – Journal of Child Language, 1984
Analyzes early lexical and phonological development in three children from late babbling through the acquisition of 50 conventional words. Focuses on (1) the relationship between prelinguistic and linguistic vocalizations, (2) phonological development after the onset of speech, (3) patterns of lexical selection, (4) rate of lexical acquisition,…
Descriptors: Child Language, Infants, Language Acquisition, Language Research
Nathan, Geoffrey S. – 1982
The natural phonology theory, related to European structuralism, makes two fundamental assumptions: (1) phonemes are mental images of the sounds of language, and (2) phonological processes represent subconscious mental substitutions of one sound or class of sounds for another that are the natural response to the relative difficulties of sound…
Descriptors: Interference (Language), Interlanguage, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Javkin, Hector – 1977
Two possible explanations based on elementary facts of physics are suggested for the universal preference for place of articulation of implosives and ejectives. Languages show a preference for ejectives in the order: velar, alveolar, and labial while implosives occur most often in the opposite order. A language will only have velar implosives if…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Consonants, Language Patterns, Language Research
Widdison, Kirk – 1989
The acoustic effects of the syllable-final /l/ significantly alter the vocalic timbre of the preceding vowel in Catalan. Vowel quality is modified anticipatory to the articulatory gestures required by the /l/, resulting in a lowered second formant. Syllable-final /l/ in Catalan is heavily velarized as a result of tongue tip-tongue back coupling…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Diachronic Linguistics, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Valimaa-Blum, Riitta – 1986
It is proposed in this paper that there are two rules involved in Finnish vowel harmony--prescriptive and descriptive. The prescriptive rule requires a back vowel in the suffix whenever there is a back vowel in the root; the descriptive rule lets the value of the last non-neutral vowel spread to the suffix and additionally involves an analysis of…
Descriptors: Finnish, Language Research, Morphology (Languages), Phonology
Camarata, Stephen M. – 1988
A case study of a 2-year-old progressing normally in speech development provides evidence of suprasegmental marking of the plural, thought to be adopted only in language-impaired children. Acoustic analyses of the durations and intensity of elicited words indicate that the child had adopted a suprasegmental strategy for marking the singular/plural…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Research
Hudson, Susan B.; And Others – 1982
Three experiments used "rhyme priming," a methodology in which lexical decisions to a visually presented word are facilitated when the word is preceded by a rhyming word, to investigate the access and maintenance of speech-based codes in sentence comprehension. In these experiments, the pairs were visually dissimilar rhymes, such as…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Language Processing, Language Research
Marks, Emilia Alonso; Moates, Danny R.; Bond, Zinny S.; Vazquez, Leonor – 1998
Replicating research originally performed with native speakers of English, this study investigated the mutability of vowels in Spanish. The study was based on the theory that when presented with non-words, native speakers are more likely to change the vowel than the consonant to arrive at an existing lexical item. It was hypothesized that if…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Language Processing, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Zee, Eric – 1990
A phonetic study of vowel devoicing in the Shanghai dialect of Chinese explored the phonetic conditions under which the high, closed vowels and the apical vowel in Shanghai are most likely to become devoiced. The phonetic conditions may be segmental or suprasegmental. Segmentally, the study sought to determine whether a certain type of pre-vocalic…
Descriptors: Chinese, Foreign Countries, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Wright, Susan – 1988
A study examined the effect of language style and variation in speech rate on the vocalization of /l/ in local Cambridge English. This sociolinguistic feature has been described as marking southeastern varieties of British English and as a connected speech process (CSP) in its sensitivity to variation in speaking rate. Language style variables…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Research, Language Styles, Language Variation
Tsujimura, Natsuko; Davis, Stuart – 1988
Problems emerging from previous analyses of epenthesis in Japanese verbal endings are discussed and a crucial relationship between epenthesis and assimilation is argued. The focus is on the occurrence of /i/-epenthesis with certain root-final consonants. The analysis, which incorporates the view that assimilation is accomplished by means of…
Descriptors: Consonants, Japanese, Language Patterns, Language Research

Hammond, Robert M. – 1976
In standard American Spanish, the velar nasal surface variant of systematic /n/ occurs only in syllable-final environments, when the immediately following segment is a velar consonant. In many American Spanish dialects, however, "ng" may also optionally appear phonetically in other phonological environments. Cuban Spanish is such a…
Descriptors: Cubans, Dialect Studies, Dialects, Language Research