The role of duration and pitch in signaling quantity in Finnmark North Sámi

Ternary quantity opposition is a cross-linguistically extremely rare typological feature. One of the languages using ternary opposition of consonants to signal linguistic contrasts is North Sámi, an endangered language spoken in several countries in the northernmost Scandinavia. Previous studies hav...

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Published in:10th International Conference on Speech Prosody 2020
Main Authors: Hiovain, Katri, Asikainen, Atte, Šimko, Juraj
Other Authors: Phonetics, Phonetics and Speech Synthesis, Mind and Matter
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/322705
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author Hiovain, Katri
Asikainen, Atte
Šimko, Juraj
author2 Phonetics
Phonetics and Speech Synthesis
Mind and Matter
author_facet Hiovain, Katri
Asikainen, Atte
Šimko, Juraj
author_sort Hiovain, Katri
collection HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository
container_start_page 71
container_title 10th International Conference on Speech Prosody 2020
description Ternary quantity opposition is a cross-linguistically extremely rare typological feature. One of the languages using ternary opposition of consonants to signal linguistic contrasts is North Sámi, an endangered language spoken in several countries in the northernmost Scandinavia. Previous studies have shown that while the contrast between the two shorter quantity degrees is phonetically robustly realized using segmental durations, phonetic differences between the two longer degrees are much more subtle and show a considerable regional variation. In this work we investigate other prosodic means that might be used to mark the contrast alongside duration, namely f0 movement and range. We show that the North Sámi speakers that are also native speakers of Norwegian use pitch to co-signal the differences between the two higher quantity degrees, while speakers that are Finnish-North Sámi bilinguals use primarily durational cues. Interpreting these findings in the light of prosodic characteristics of the majority languages (Finnish and Norwegian) we argue that these regional differences reflect the majority language influence which can be a source of the ongoing dialectal divergence, and potential language change. Peer reviewed
format Conference Object
genre Finnmark
North Sámi
Sámi
Finnmark
genre_facet Finnmark
North Sámi
Sámi
Finnmark
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op_relation Proceedings of 10th International Conference on Speech Prosody 2020, Tokyo, Japan
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spelling ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/322705 2025-04-06T14:52:10+00:00 The role of duration and pitch in signaling quantity in Finnmark North Sámi Hiovain, Katri Asikainen, Atte Šimko, Juraj Phonetics Phonetics and Speech Synthesis Mind and Matter 2020-12-11T05:32:02Z 5 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10138/322705 eng eng Proceedings of 10th International Conference on Speech Prosody 2020, Tokyo, Japan Speech prosody 10.21437/SpeechProsody.2020-15 conference http://hdl.handle.net/10138/322705 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess openAccess 6161 Phonetics Conference contribution publishedVersion 2020 ftunivhelsihelda 2025-03-10T15:16:42Z Ternary quantity opposition is a cross-linguistically extremely rare typological feature. One of the languages using ternary opposition of consonants to signal linguistic contrasts is North Sámi, an endangered language spoken in several countries in the northernmost Scandinavia. Previous studies have shown that while the contrast between the two shorter quantity degrees is phonetically robustly realized using segmental durations, phonetic differences between the two longer degrees are much more subtle and show a considerable regional variation. In this work we investigate other prosodic means that might be used to mark the contrast alongside duration, namely f0 movement and range. We show that the North Sámi speakers that are also native speakers of Norwegian use pitch to co-signal the differences between the two higher quantity degrees, while speakers that are Finnish-North Sámi bilinguals use primarily durational cues. Interpreting these findings in the light of prosodic characteristics of the majority languages (Finnish and Norwegian) we argue that these regional differences reflect the majority language influence which can be a source of the ongoing dialectal divergence, and potential language change. Peer reviewed Conference Object Finnmark North Sámi Sámi Finnmark HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository 10th International Conference on Speech Prosody 2020 71 75
spellingShingle 6161 Phonetics
Hiovain, Katri
Asikainen, Atte
Šimko, Juraj
The role of duration and pitch in signaling quantity in Finnmark North Sámi
title The role of duration and pitch in signaling quantity in Finnmark North Sámi
title_full The role of duration and pitch in signaling quantity in Finnmark North Sámi
title_fullStr The role of duration and pitch in signaling quantity in Finnmark North Sámi
title_full_unstemmed The role of duration and pitch in signaling quantity in Finnmark North Sámi
title_short The role of duration and pitch in signaling quantity in Finnmark North Sámi
title_sort role of duration and pitch in signaling quantity in finnmark north sámi
topic 6161 Phonetics
topic_facet 6161 Phonetics
url http://hdl.handle.net/10138/322705