An acoustic study of Canadian raising in three dialects of North American English

“Canadian Raising” (CR) is a phonological process typical of Canadian English, defined as the production of /aj, aw/ with raised nuclei before voiceless codas, e.g. in about. This dissertation investigates the relationship between CR and another process which abbreviates vowels in the same phonologi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Onosson, D. Sky
Other Authors: D'Arcy, Alexandra
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9274
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-92742019-10-22T10:38:24Z An acoustic study of Canadian raising in three dialects of North American English Onosson, D. Sky D'Arcy, Alexandra Bird, Sonya Frances linguistics phonetics phonology sociolinguistics sociophonetics diphthongs Canadian English Canadian Raising Manitoba Colorado Wisconsin “Canadian Raising” (CR) is a phonological process typical of Canadian English, defined as the production of /aj, aw/ with raised nuclei before voiceless codas, e.g. in about. This dissertation investigates the relationship between CR and another process which abbreviates vowels in the same phonological context in most English dialects: pre-voiceless vowel abbreviation (PVVA). This study sampled three North American dialects: Canada, and the American West and North. Comparisons of vowel duration and formant trajectories revealed common patterns and specific differences between these dialects related to both CR and PVVA. Comparisons of vowel formant trajectories were conducted using statistical techniques for comparing curvilinear datasets, employed in novel methodology which utilizes multiple models of time-scaling. Results indicate that the allophonic production of /aw/ differs in Canadian English in relation to the other dialects, while /aj/ follows a common pattern in all three. I argue that PVVA is achieved through the gestural reorganization of vowels preceding voiceless coda, with the dynamic nature of diphthongs making possible several patterns of abbreviation, two of which are attested in these data: truncation of the onset i.e. the diphthongal nucleus, and compression of the overall trajectory; truncation of the offset is also attested for some monophthongs. Differences in selection of which of these abbrevatory patterns applies to /aw/ in Canadian English versus other dialects accounts for the observed differences in phonetic output. These results indicate that it is worth reconsidering several aspects of the current conception of CR, as follows. First, diphthong-raising processes can be directly linked to the more common process of vowel abbreviation, with consideration of how diphthongal gestures are organized, and reorganized in relation to post-vocalic voicing gestures. Second, that /aw/-raising appears to be distinctly Canadian. And third, that /aj/-raising is not specifically Canadian, suggesting that the two terms be described and named distinctly. This dissertation contributes to the literature on sociophonetics in two major ways: by indicating how CR is directly connected to PVVA in contemporary speech, beyond their surmised historical connections; and, by developing novel methodology for the analysis of dynamic formant trajectories, involving comparison of different time-scaling methods. Graduate 2018-04-30T16:14:19Z 2018-04-30T16:14:19Z 2018 2018-04-30 Thesis https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9274 en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic linguistics
phonetics
phonology
sociolinguistics
sociophonetics
diphthongs
Canadian English
Canadian Raising
Manitoba
Colorado
Wisconsin
spellingShingle linguistics
phonetics
phonology
sociolinguistics
sociophonetics
diphthongs
Canadian English
Canadian Raising
Manitoba
Colorado
Wisconsin
Onosson, D. Sky
An acoustic study of Canadian raising in three dialects of North American English
description “Canadian Raising” (CR) is a phonological process typical of Canadian English, defined as the production of /aj, aw/ with raised nuclei before voiceless codas, e.g. in about. This dissertation investigates the relationship between CR and another process which abbreviates vowels in the same phonological context in most English dialects: pre-voiceless vowel abbreviation (PVVA). This study sampled three North American dialects: Canada, and the American West and North. Comparisons of vowel duration and formant trajectories revealed common patterns and specific differences between these dialects related to both CR and PVVA. Comparisons of vowel formant trajectories were conducted using statistical techniques for comparing curvilinear datasets, employed in novel methodology which utilizes multiple models of time-scaling. Results indicate that the allophonic production of /aw/ differs in Canadian English in relation to the other dialects, while /aj/ follows a common pattern in all three. I argue that PVVA is achieved through the gestural reorganization of vowels preceding voiceless coda, with the dynamic nature of diphthongs making possible several patterns of abbreviation, two of which are attested in these data: truncation of the onset i.e. the diphthongal nucleus, and compression of the overall trajectory; truncation of the offset is also attested for some monophthongs. Differences in selection of which of these abbrevatory patterns applies to /aw/ in Canadian English versus other dialects accounts for the observed differences in phonetic output. These results indicate that it is worth reconsidering several aspects of the current conception of CR, as follows. First, diphthong-raising processes can be directly linked to the more common process of vowel abbreviation, with consideration of how diphthongal gestures are organized, and reorganized in relation to post-vocalic voicing gestures. Second, that /aw/-raising appears to be distinctly Canadian. And third, that /aj/-raising is not specifically Canadian, suggesting that the two terms be described and named distinctly. This dissertation contributes to the literature on sociophonetics in two major ways: by indicating how CR is directly connected to PVVA in contemporary speech, beyond their surmised historical connections; and, by developing novel methodology for the analysis of dynamic formant trajectories, involving comparison of different time-scaling methods. === Graduate
author2 D'Arcy, Alexandra
author_facet D'Arcy, Alexandra
Onosson, D. Sky
author Onosson, D. Sky
author_sort Onosson, D. Sky
title An acoustic study of Canadian raising in three dialects of North American English
title_short An acoustic study of Canadian raising in three dialects of North American English
title_full An acoustic study of Canadian raising in three dialects of North American English
title_fullStr An acoustic study of Canadian raising in three dialects of North American English
title_full_unstemmed An acoustic study of Canadian raising in three dialects of North American English
title_sort acoustic study of canadian raising in three dialects of north american english
publishDate 2018
url https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9274
work_keys_str_mv AT onossondsky anacousticstudyofcanadianraisinginthreedialectsofnorthamericanenglish
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