Examines how accents differ in 'voice quality' across languages and presents a new framework for its analysis with a revised model of lower-vocal-tract articulation, focusing on the larynx in speech. It will appeal to students and researchers in linguistics, phonetics, child language, speech science, clinical linguistics, and forensic phonetics.
Examines how accents differ in 'voice quality' across languages and presents a new framework for its analysis with a revised model of lower-vocal-tract articulation, focusing on the larynx in speech. It will appeal to students and researchers in linguistics, phonetics, child language, speech science, clinical linguistics, and forensic phonetics.
John H. Esling is Professor Emeritus of Linguistics at the University of Victoria, British Columbia.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Voice and voice quality 2. Voice quality classification 3. Instrumental case studies and computational simulations of voice quality 4. Linguistic, paralinguistic and extralinguistic illustrations of voice quality 5. Phonological implications of voice quality theory 6. Infant acquisition of speech and voice quality 7. Clinical illustrations of voice quality 8. Laryngeal articulation and voice quality in sound change, language ontogeny.
1. Voice and voice quality 2. Voice quality classification 3. Instrumental case studies and computational simulations of voice quality 4. Linguistic, paralinguistic and extralinguistic illustrations of voice quality 5. Phonological implications of voice quality theory 6. Infant acquisition of speech and voice quality 7. Clinical illustrations of voice quality 8. Laryngeal articulation and voice quality in sound change, language ontogeny.
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