The articulatory correlates of Singapore English vowels

Existing research on the vowel system of Singapore English has been limited to acoustic examination and analyses only. The present study thus aims to supplement this area of research by providing articulatory descriptions of the Singapore English vowels, specifically looking at lingual and laryng...

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Main Author: Lin, Jingmin
Other Authors: Scott Reid Moisik
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155448
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1554482023-03-11T20:15:20Z The articulatory correlates of Singapore English vowels Lin, Jingmin Scott Reid Moisik School of Humanities scott.moisik@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::Linguistics::Phonetics Existing research on the vowel system of Singapore English has been limited to acoustic examination and analyses only. The present study thus aims to supplement this area of research by providing articulatory descriptions of the Singapore English vowels, specifically looking at lingual and laryngeal articulation. This is achieved by visualising and recording the tongue and larynx during natural, running speech (a picture description task), through the use of ultrasound imaging. With the articulatory data collected, we sought to address a few main questions: (1) What the extent of merger in the long-short and /e/-/æ/ vowel pairs in Singapore English is, both in terms of acoustics and articulation; (2) How advanced /u/-fronting is in Singapore English, if at all; and (3) Whether larynx height varies systematically as a function of vowel quality—even in naturalistic speech. Data analysis revealed that the extent of acoustic merger in the vowel pairs was not as advanced as indicated in previous studies, and there appears to be some differentiation through lingual (and to some extent, laryngeal) articulation in these vowel pairs. We also found that /u/ is produced with a relatively central position in Singapore English, rather than being fully ‘back’ as traditionally expected. Lastly, the ranking of vowels according to vertical larynx position is surprisingly consistent with past findings despite the nature of our data, and we posit that laryngeal articulation may be actively employed in order to augment the acoustic difference between /e/ and /æ/ in Singapore English. Master of Arts 2022-03-14T23:57:06Z 2022-03-14T23:57:06Z 2021 Thesis-Master by Research Lin, J. (2021). The articulatory correlates of Singapore English vowels. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155448 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155448 10.32657/10356/155448 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Linguistics::Phonetics
spellingShingle Humanities::Linguistics::Phonetics
Lin, Jingmin
The articulatory correlates of Singapore English vowels
description Existing research on the vowel system of Singapore English has been limited to acoustic examination and analyses only. The present study thus aims to supplement this area of research by providing articulatory descriptions of the Singapore English vowels, specifically looking at lingual and laryngeal articulation. This is achieved by visualising and recording the tongue and larynx during natural, running speech (a picture description task), through the use of ultrasound imaging. With the articulatory data collected, we sought to address a few main questions: (1) What the extent of merger in the long-short and /e/-/æ/ vowel pairs in Singapore English is, both in terms of acoustics and articulation; (2) How advanced /u/-fronting is in Singapore English, if at all; and (3) Whether larynx height varies systematically as a function of vowel quality—even in naturalistic speech. Data analysis revealed that the extent of acoustic merger in the vowel pairs was not as advanced as indicated in previous studies, and there appears to be some differentiation through lingual (and to some extent, laryngeal) articulation in these vowel pairs. We also found that /u/ is produced with a relatively central position in Singapore English, rather than being fully ‘back’ as traditionally expected. Lastly, the ranking of vowels according to vertical larynx position is surprisingly consistent with past findings despite the nature of our data, and we posit that laryngeal articulation may be actively employed in order to augment the acoustic difference between /e/ and /æ/ in Singapore English.
author2 Scott Reid Moisik
author_facet Scott Reid Moisik
Lin, Jingmin
format Thesis-Master by Research
author Lin, Jingmin
author_sort Lin, Jingmin
title The articulatory correlates of Singapore English vowels
title_short The articulatory correlates of Singapore English vowels
title_full The articulatory correlates of Singapore English vowels
title_fullStr The articulatory correlates of Singapore English vowels
title_full_unstemmed The articulatory correlates of Singapore English vowels
title_sort articulatory correlates of singapore english vowels
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155448
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