The phonetics and phonology of Lheidli intervocalic consonants

This dissertation explores the phonetics and phonology of intervocalic consonants in Lheidli, a dialect of Dakelh (Carrier) Athapaskan spoken in the interior of British Columbia. Through a series of studies on Lheidli, I show quantitatively what has previously been noted impressionistically in the A...

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Main Author: Bird, Sonya F.
Other Authors: Hammond, Michael, Warner, Natasha
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: The University of Arizona. 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/280137
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spelling ftunivarizona:oai:repository.arizona.edu:10150/280137 2023-05-15T15:59:55+02:00 The phonetics and phonology of Lheidli intervocalic consonants Bird, Sonya F. Hammond, Michael Warner, Natasha 2002 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/280137 en_US eng The University of Arizona. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/280137 3061021 .b43042703 Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Language Linguistics text Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) 2002 ftunivarizona 2020-06-14T08:07:17Z This dissertation explores the phonetics and phonology of intervocalic consonants in Lheidli, a dialect of Dakelh (Carrier) Athapaskan spoken in the interior of British Columbia. Through a series of studies on Lheidli, I show quantitatively what has previously been noted impressionistically in the Athapaskan literature: intervocalic consonants are remarkably long. The implication of these consonants for the structure of Lheidli is approached from two perspectives. First, I investigate their role from a purely phonetic approach, focusing on their effect on the perceived rhythmic structure of Lheidli. I propose a new model of rhythm, the Enhancement/Inhibition model, in which the perception of rhythm is created by the interplay between primary and secondary correlates of rhythm. Within the proposed model, the Lheidli data show that one of the important secondary correlates is inherent segmental duration, an element that has not yet been considered in the literature. Second, I investigate the role of intervocalic consonants from a phonological approach, focusing on their effect on syllabification. I present the results of a series of studies on the distribution of vowel duration and quality, the distribution of consonant duration, native speaker syllabification intuitions, and the interaction between stress placement and intervocalic consonant duration. Together these studies lead me to analyze Lheidli intervocalic consonants as non-contrastive, moraic geminates. I conclude by discussing the implications of the Lheidli data for phonetic and phonological theory. I argue the duration of intervocalic consonants is encoded in the Lheidli grammar as part of the language-specific phonetics. Furthermore, because this duration interacts with syllabification, it is encoded in the phonology as weight. Although in Lheidli the phonetic duration of intervocalic consonants is encoded in the phonology as well as the grammar, I propose that not all language-specific phonetic properties are specified in the grammar. This is the case for rhythm, for example, which is an effect of other phonetic and phonological factors of the language rather than being a linguistic primitive itself. Thesis Dakelh The University of Arizona: UA Campus Repository
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Arizona: UA Campus Repository
op_collection_id ftunivarizona
language English
topic Language
Linguistics
spellingShingle Language
Linguistics
Bird, Sonya F.
The phonetics and phonology of Lheidli intervocalic consonants
topic_facet Language
Linguistics
description This dissertation explores the phonetics and phonology of intervocalic consonants in Lheidli, a dialect of Dakelh (Carrier) Athapaskan spoken in the interior of British Columbia. Through a series of studies on Lheidli, I show quantitatively what has previously been noted impressionistically in the Athapaskan literature: intervocalic consonants are remarkably long. The implication of these consonants for the structure of Lheidli is approached from two perspectives. First, I investigate their role from a purely phonetic approach, focusing on their effect on the perceived rhythmic structure of Lheidli. I propose a new model of rhythm, the Enhancement/Inhibition model, in which the perception of rhythm is created by the interplay between primary and secondary correlates of rhythm. Within the proposed model, the Lheidli data show that one of the important secondary correlates is inherent segmental duration, an element that has not yet been considered in the literature. Second, I investigate the role of intervocalic consonants from a phonological approach, focusing on their effect on syllabification. I present the results of a series of studies on the distribution of vowel duration and quality, the distribution of consonant duration, native speaker syllabification intuitions, and the interaction between stress placement and intervocalic consonant duration. Together these studies lead me to analyze Lheidli intervocalic consonants as non-contrastive, moraic geminates. I conclude by discussing the implications of the Lheidli data for phonetic and phonological theory. I argue the duration of intervocalic consonants is encoded in the Lheidli grammar as part of the language-specific phonetics. Furthermore, because this duration interacts with syllabification, it is encoded in the phonology as weight. Although in Lheidli the phonetic duration of intervocalic consonants is encoded in the phonology as well as the grammar, I propose that not all language-specific phonetic properties are specified in the grammar. This is the case for rhythm, for example, which is an effect of other phonetic and phonological factors of the language rather than being a linguistic primitive itself.
author2 Hammond, Michael
Warner, Natasha
format Thesis
author Bird, Sonya F.
author_facet Bird, Sonya F.
author_sort Bird, Sonya F.
title The phonetics and phonology of Lheidli intervocalic consonants
title_short The phonetics and phonology of Lheidli intervocalic consonants
title_full The phonetics and phonology of Lheidli intervocalic consonants
title_fullStr The phonetics and phonology of Lheidli intervocalic consonants
title_full_unstemmed The phonetics and phonology of Lheidli intervocalic consonants
title_sort phonetics and phonology of lheidli intervocalic consonants
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2002
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/280137
genre Dakelh
genre_facet Dakelh
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/280137
3061021
.b43042703
op_rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author.
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