This work presents results of an acoustic study of fricatives in 7 languages (Aleut, Chickasaw, Hupa, Montana Salish, Scottish Gaelic, Toda, and Western Apache), all of which contrast fricatives made at several places of articulation. Measurements of the frequency of spectral peaks and centroid frequencies indicate many similarities between the languages in the acoustic properties defining the fricatives. Some of the principal findings are the following. Alveolar sibilants typically have the highest spectral peak and centroid frequency. Lateral and palatoalveolar fricatives have spectral peaks and centroids intermediate in frequency between alveolar sibilants and backer fricatives. Among the back fricatives, peaks and centroids of uvulars are characteristically lower than those of velars. Rounding of back fricatives induces further lowering of peaks and/or centroids. Contrasts in backness and rounding among the back fricatives are also associated with differences in F2 of the following vowels: F2 values are lower following uvulars than velars, and lower following rounded than unrounded fricatives. Labiodental fricatives typically have flat spectra with poorly defined spectral peaks. Finally, the contrast between lateral fricatives and palatoalveolar sibilants is variably realized, depending on language and speaker, as a difference in the location of spectral peaks and/or centroid frequency.
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November 2000
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November 01 2000
A cross‐linguistic acoustic study of fricatives Free
Matthew K. Gordon;
Matthew K. Gordon
Dept. of Linguist., Univ. of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106
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Paul Barthmaier;
Paul Barthmaier
Dept. of Linguist., Univ. of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106
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Kathy Sands
Kathy Sands
Dept. of Linguist., Univ. of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106
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Matthew K. Gordon
Paul Barthmaier
Kathy Sands
Dept. of Linguist., Univ. of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 108, 2506 (2000)
Citation
Matthew K. Gordon, Paul Barthmaier, Kathy Sands; A cross‐linguistic acoustic study of fricatives. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 November 2000; 108 (5_Supplement): 2506. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4743257
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