Adam Sikorski’s research while affiliated with University of Warsaw and other places

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Publications (1)


Figure 4 Surface realisations of underlying /p t k b d g/ in the main database. underlying representation
Phonological contrasts and gradient effects in ongoing lenition in the Spanish of Gran Canaria
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February 2021

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26 Citations

Phonology

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Adam Sikorski

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Jan Wołłejko

This study explores ongoing lenition of postvocalic /p t k b d g/ in the Spanish of Gran Canaria. Duration, intensity and harmonics-to-noise ratio of 16,454 sounds produced by 44 native speakers were measured, with the latter phonetic parameter used for the first time to investigate lenition. The results show a path of gradual sound shortening and opening from voiceless stops to open approximants, as well as systematic use of six different variants depending on the underlying representation and phonological context: two types of [p t k], two types of [b d g] and two types of [β˕ ð˕ ɣ˕]. We interpret this as continuity lenition that leads to the flattening of the intensity contour and harmonicity of the target segment with respect to the flanking sounds. We argue that a phonological analysis of this process that accounts for its non-neutralising character requires the use of a scalar [aperture] feature.

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Citations (1)


... There is a plausible aerodynamic explanation for the preferred absence of frication noise in conso nants that undergo both voicing and spirantisation: vocal fold vibration inhibits airflow, thus reducing the potential for air turbulence at the point of stricture (Ohala 1983). Terms such approximantisation (Broś et al. 2021) or vocalisation might be better here, if these are taken to mean the conversion of a consonant into a vocoid, a point we return to in our analysis of Ibibio. Nevertheless, the term spirantisation seems to have stuck, perhaps in recognition of the fact that vocoid outputs of lenition are not always canonical approximants like the yod output illustrated in (1b). ...

Reference:

A unified model of lenition as modulation reduction: gauging consonant strength in Ibibio
Phonological contrasts and gradient effects in ongoing lenition in the Spanish of Gran Canaria

Phonology