| Literature DB >> 9055443 |
Abstract
The goal of this paper is to test whether the palatal nasal stop [symbol: see text] occurring in several Romance languages, Hungarian and Czech, is a two-gesture, complex segment (produced with a tongue front closure and intentional tongue dorsum raising) or else a one-gesture, simple segment (articulated at the alveoloprepalatal zone with a single tongue portion including the lamina and predorsum). In order to investigate this issue, electromagnetic midsagittal articulometer data were collected on apical, laminal and dorsal movement data for Catalan [symbol: see text] and Russian palatalized alveolar /nj/ (which is known to be a complex segment); other sound classes of both languages were also recorded, namely, the simple palatal segment /j/ and the two-segmental cluster /nj/. Time lags between position maxima at the tongue front and at the tongue dorsum argue strongly in favor of [symbol: see text] being a simple segment: they were found to be considerably shorter for [symbol: see text] than for /nj/; moreover, those for /nj/ were significantly longer than those for /j/ in Russian but not so in Catalan. In conjunction with linguopalatal contact data from the literature, it is argued that a longer time lag for [symbol: see text] vs. /j/ is representative of an unintentional, transitional event resulting from the alveoloprepalatal closure release for the former consonant occurring at the alveolar zone earlier than at the prepalatal zone.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1997 PMID: 9055443 DOI: 10.1159/000262209
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phonetica ISSN: 0031-8388 Impact factor: 1.759