Using very large speech corpora, we can study rare but systematic pronunciation patterns in spontaneous speech. Previous studies have established that word-final alveolar consonants in English (/t/, /d/, /n/, /s/ and /z/) vary their place of articulation to match a following word-initial consonant, e.g. "ran quickly" → "ra[ŋ] quickly". Assimilation of bilabial or velar nasals, e.g. "alar[ŋ] clock" for "alarm clock", is unexpected according to linguistic frameworks such as underspecification theory. The existence of systematic counterexamples would challenge that theory, but these might have been previously overlooked because they are infrequent. From the c. 8-million word Audio BNC (http://www.phon.ox.ac.uk/AudioBNC) we extracted c. 12,000 tokens of relevant word pairs, to determine whether non-alveolar assimilations occur and with what distribution. Word and segment boundaries were obtained by forced alignment, and F1-F3 formant frequencies were estimated using Praat. Formant frequencies in assimilation environments were compared to non-assimilating controls (e.g. them down vs. them back/then down). We also examined patterns of variability in different contexts. We will present evidence that velar and bilabial nasals sometimes do assimilate, though less frequently than alveolars.
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2 June 2013
ICA 2013 Montreal
2–7 June 2013
Montreal, Canada
Speech Communication: Session 5aSCb: Production and Perception II: The Speech Segment (Poster Session)
May 17 2013
Assimilation of word-final nasals to following word-initial place of articulation in United Kingdom English Free
Margaret E. Renwick;
Margaret E. Renwick
Phonetics Laboratory, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
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Ladan Baghai-Ravary;
Ladan Baghai-Ravary
Phonetics Laboratory, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
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Ros Temple;
Ros Temple
Phonetics Laboratory, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
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John S. Coleman
John S. Coleman
Phonetics Laboratory, University of Oxford, 41 Wellington Square, Oxford, Oxfordshire OX1 2JF United Kingdom
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Margaret E. Renwick
Ladan Baghai-Ravary
Ros Temple
John S. Coleman
Phonetics Laboratory, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
Proc. Mtgs. Acoust. 19, 060257 (2013)
Article history
Received:
January 22 2013
Accepted:
January 31 2013
Citation
Margaret E. Renwick, Ladan Baghai-Ravary, Ros Temple, John S. Coleman; Assimilation of word-final nasals to following word-initial place of articulation in United Kingdom English. Proc. Mtgs. Acoust. 2 June 2013; 19 (1): 060257. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4800279
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