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Effects of Place of Articulation and Vowel Context on VOT Production and Perception for French and English Stops

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2009

Terrance M. Nearey*
Affiliation:
Department of Linguistics
Bernard L. Rochet
Affiliation:
Department of Romance Languages, University of Alberta, Edmonton, CanadaT6G 2E7
*
* Address for correspondence: T. M. Nearey, Department of Linguistics, 4-32 Assiniboia Hall, University of Alberta, Edmonton AB CANADA T6G 2E7. E-mail: nearey@nova.ling.ualberta.ca

Extract

The focus of this study is the nature of the secondary effects of place of articulation and vowel quality on VOT (and other acoustic properties) in the production of stops in French and English and the consequences of these factors on the perception of VOT continua by speakers of those languages. Although the largest source of differences in VOT is that associated with the voicing contrast, a number of previous studies indicate that both French and English stops show an effect of place of articulation, with velars showing longer VOT than labials or coronals in accord with the general tendencies noted by Lisker and Abramson (1967; see also Volaitis and Miller 1992). However, some modulation of VOT by vowel context has also been reported. Thus, Fischer-Jørgensen (1972) finds that, in French voiceless stops, VOT is longer before a high vowel than before a low vowel. She further reports an interaction between the place of articulation of the consonant and the identity of the vowel. Specifically, for /p/, the longest voicing lags occur before high rounded vowels (/u/ and /y/); but for /t/ and /k/, they are longest before /i/. Yeni-Komshian, Caramazza and Preston (1977: 43) also report longer voicing lags before /i/ than before /a/ or /o/ for unilingual French speakers.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Journal of the International Phonetic Association 1994

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