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Airflow and duration patterns in Tunisian Arabic fricatives.

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Airflow and duration patterns in Tunisian Arabic fricatives were examined in data from six male speakers. TA is conventionally described as having eight fricative phonemes, five voiceless (labio-dental, alveolar, uvular, pharyngeal and “glottal”) and three voiced (dental, alveolar, and pharyngeal). These segments occur as singletons and geminates. Tokens of both types were collected in word-medial position following an initial /Ca/ sequence, where C is a single stop and /a/ a short low back vowel. Duration of this vowel preceding singleton and geminate fricatives was compared with its duration preceding a medial fricative + consonant (/FC/) cluster, where a syllable boundary is assumed to occur between /F/ and /C/ (e.g., /kafara, kaffara, kafra/). Vowel duration before the geminate is similar to that observed before the cluster, arguing for a syllable boundary within the geminate. However, airflow patterns do not suggest that any “re-articulation” occurs during the geminate constriction [unlike in French pseudo-geminates, Smith (1996)]. Airflow shows the expected elevation at the transitions between vowel and fricative and a single low trough during the constriction, except for /h/. Because there is no supraglottal constriction, /h/ has peak airflow near the center of its duration. Thus /h/ does not pattern with other “gutturals.”
Title: Airflow and duration patterns in Tunisian Arabic fricatives.
Description:
Airflow and duration patterns in Tunisian Arabic fricatives were examined in data from six male speakers.
TA is conventionally described as having eight fricative phonemes, five voiceless (labio-dental, alveolar, uvular, pharyngeal and “glottal”) and three voiced (dental, alveolar, and pharyngeal).
These segments occur as singletons and geminates.
Tokens of both types were collected in word-medial position following an initial /Ca/ sequence, where C is a single stop and /a/ a short low back vowel.
Duration of this vowel preceding singleton and geminate fricatives was compared with its duration preceding a medial fricative + consonant (/FC/) cluster, where a syllable boundary is assumed to occur between /F/ and /C/ (e.
g.
, /kafara, kaffara, kafra/).
Vowel duration before the geminate is similar to that observed before the cluster, arguing for a syllable boundary within the geminate.
However, airflow patterns do not suggest that any “re-articulation” occurs during the geminate constriction [unlike in French pseudo-geminates, Smith (1996)].
Airflow shows the expected elevation at the transitions between vowel and fricative and a single low trough during the constriction, except for /h/.
Because there is no supraglottal constriction, /h/ has peak airflow near the center of its duration.
Thus /h/ does not pattern with other “gutturals.
”.

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