In this production study involving a task of real words and a task of nonce words, epenthesis in obstruent-obstruent clusters in Brazilian Portuguese was investigated and the acoustic properties of epenthetic and lexical [i] were compared. A number of linguistic factors were found to be significant predictors of the epenthesis rate: voicing of the consonants of the cluster, manner of articulation of the second consonant, place of articulation of both consonants, and position of the cluster with respect to the stressed syllable. Moreover, there was a higher epenthesis rate for nonce words than for real words. As for the quality of the epenthetic vowel, it was found to have the same F1 as the lexical [i] in the language, but it was significantly shorter in duration, and it had a significantly lower F2 in the nonce words, but not in the real words. Finally, we found a relatively high rate of deletion of lexical [i], conditioned by the same factors that conditioned epenthesis rate, but in the opposite direction. It is concluded that epenthesis is a phonological phenomenon in Brazilian Portuguese, but that there is also acoustic reduction in the language that affects both lexical and epenthetic vowels.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
October 2016
Meeting abstract. No PDF available.
October 01 2016
Acoustics of epenthetic vowels in Brazilian Portuguese Free
Maria Kouneli
Maria Kouneli
Linguist, New York Univ., 10 Washington Pl., New York, NY 10003, [email protected]
Search for other works by this author on:
Maria Kouneli
Linguist, New York Univ., 10 Washington Pl., New York, NY 10003, [email protected]
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 140, 3109 (2016)
Citation
Maria Kouneli; Acoustics of epenthetic vowels in Brazilian Portuguese. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 October 2016; 140 (4_Supplement): 3109. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4969715
Download citation file:
Citing articles via
Focality of sound source placement by higher (ninth) order ambisonics and perceptual effects of spectral reproduction errors
Nima Zargarnezhad, Bruno Mesquita, et al.
A survey of sound source localization with deep learning methods
Pierre-Amaury Grumiaux, Srđan Kitić, et al.
Drawer-like tunable ventilated sound barrier
Yong Ge, Yi-jun Guan, et al.
Related Content
Experimentally testing the epenthetic bias in loanword adaptation
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. (March 2019)
Vowel epenthesis in productions of English consonant clusters by Japanese
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. (October 1999)
A closer look at perceptual epenthesis in cross‐language perception.
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. (April 2009)
Perceptual consequences of unintended epenthetic stops
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. (February 1999)
Individual differences in vowel epenthesis among Korean learners of English.
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. (October 2010)