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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Nasals and nasalisation in speech production with special emphasis on methodology and Osaka Japanese /

Tronnier, Mechtild. January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Lunds universitet, April 1998. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 208-219).
12

Coarticulatory influences on the perception of nasal vowel height and the role of language experience

Goodin-Mayeda, Carrie Elizabeth, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--UCLA, 2009. / Vita. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 112-123).
13

The effect of increasing speaking rate on acoustic and perceptual measures of nasality in hearing impaired speakers : a thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Audiology in the University of Canterbury /

Dwyer, C. H. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.Aud.)--University of Canterbury, 2007. / Typescript (photocopy). Includes bibliographical references (leaves 89-101). Also available via the World Wide Web.
14

Apyngwa rupigwa : nasalização em Nhandewa-Guarani / Nasalization in nhandewa-Guarani

Costa, Consuelo de Paiva Godinho 13 June 2007 (has links)
Orientador: Wilmar da Rocha D'Angelis / Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Estudos da Linguagem / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-09T04:52:42Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Costa_ConsuelodePaivaGodinho_D.pdf: 1274193 bytes, checksum: 2b0516ea14f10b0e23a5168f80ee765a (MD5) Previous issue date: 2007 / Resumo: Os processos de nasalização em línguas Guarani têm sido objeto de interesse da Fonologia há várias décadas, já tendo sido tratados em diferentes abordagens e modelos teóricos. Apesar disso, nenhuma das interpretações sugeridas encontrou aceitação irrestrita entre os estudiosos dessas línguas. Esta tese aborda os processos de nasalização no Nhandewa-Guarani, a língua falada por uma parcialidade Guarani que habita o Estado de São Paulo e o norte do Estado do Paraná, no Brasil meridional, e pretende contribuir à busca por uma interpretação abrangente e conclusiva desses processos nas mencionadas línguas. Além disso, ao tentar abarcar, com o mesmo aparato explicativo, fenômenos de nasalização de outras línguas da família Tupi-Guarani, como o Tapirapé, pretendo romper o círculo que tem separado a análise de fenômenos das línguas Guarani daquela de outras línguas da mesma família e, ao mesmo tempo, romper a barreira que parece existir para uma aceitação de que fenômenos de harmonização nasal também ocorrem no 'ramo Tupi¿ daquela família lingüística / Abstract: The nasalization process in the Guarani languages has been object of the Phonology interest by several decades. This process has been treated by different approaches and theoretical models. Although, none interpretation proposed was unrestrictedly accepted among the scholars of these languages. This work approaches the nasalization process in the Nhandewa-Guarani, language spoken by the Guarani people living in São Paulo and in the north region of Paraná, Southern Brazil. This work intends to contribute to the quest of a productive and conclusive interpretation for the process in these languages. Furthermore, in attempting to include, with the same explanatory apparatus, the nasalization phenomena of the others languages of the Tupi-Guarani family, such as Tapirapé, I intend to break the circle which has separated the analysis of the phenomena of the Guarani languages from those of the others languages in the same family, and, at same time, to break down the obstacle that seems to exist concerning to the acceptation that nasal harmony phenomena also occurs in the 'Tupi branch¿ of that linguistic family / Doutorado / Linguistica / Doutor em Linguística
15

Spreading and locality domains in phonology

Prunet, Jean-François. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
16

Licensing and the representation of floating nasals

Tourville, José January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
17

Spreading and locality domains in phonology

Prunet, Jean-François. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
18

Licensing and the representation of floating nasals

Tourville, José January 1991 (has links)
It is commonly agreed that phonological elements must be prosodically licensed in order to be interpreted phonetically (cf. Ito, 1986). The licensing of segments is generally assumed to follow from the Universal Association Conventions. The licensing of phonological units smaller than the segment, however, has not been fully addressed. There is no agreement on the exact licensing mechanisms at play and on what constitutes a proper anchor for the initial association of floating subsegmentals. This thesis proposes a principled account of subsegmental licensing within the theory of segmental structure known as feature geometry, as modified by Piggott (to appear). It is shown that the manifestation of nasality in Maukaka, Koyaga, Jula, and Terena result from the way licensing operates. It is argued that, universally, floating subsegmental units are licensed through mapping, which associates a unit to an available position. It is also proposed that whenever there is no proper position for the mapping of a subsegmental element, this element may be licensed by Chomsky-adjunction. This type of adjunction has played a role in syllabification but not in the organization of feature.
19

Nasals and nasalisation in speech production with special emphasis on methodology and Osaka Japanese /

Tronnier, Mechtild. January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Lunds universitet, April 1998. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 208-219).
20

A nasalidade em Mebengokre e Apinaye : o limite do vozeamento soante

Salanova, Andres Pablo 06 November 2001 (has links)
Orientador: Maria Bernadete Marques Abaurre / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Estudos da Linguagem / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-02T07:02:29Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Salanova_AndresPablo_M.pdf: 3940770 bytes, checksum: 82053ae7e623981dda7134b816553fb4 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2001 / Resumo: Esta tese tem uma dupla finalidade. Em primeiro lugar, ela se propõe a descrição dos sistemas fonológicos de duas línguas Jê setentrionais bastante próximas entre si: Mebengokre (língua das nações Xikrin e Kayapó) e Apinayé (língua da nação homônima). Em segundo, propõe-se a discutir de maneira critica a própria noção de sistema fonológico, mostrando como certos fatos que nos estudos descritivos são normalmente tratados como "processos fonológicos" divorciados do sistema (pensado às vezes como mero inventário), dizem respeito às oposições constitutivas do sistema fonológico. Para exemplificar estas idéias, nos detemos em certos processos que envolvem nasalidade e vozeamento nestas línguas. Uma das diferenças mais nítidas entre a fonologia do Mebengokre e a do Apinayé diz respeito ao comportamento das consoantes "nasais": no primeiro sistema, as consoantes nasais contrastam claramente com oclusivas sonoras. Em Apinayé, ao contrário, consoantes plenamente nasais e consoantes oclusivas sonoras com contornos nasalizados estão em distribuição complementar. Em um primeiro momento, argumentamos que representar as consoantes de contorno como tendo especificação de [nasal] nos leva a certos constrangimentos (a nasalidade teria, nestes segmentos, comportamento absolutamente "passivo", recuando inclusive diante de [-nasal], e por isso optamos por uma representação na qual a nasalidade pode ser um epifenômeno da implementação do vozeamento soante. Alguns fatos do Apinayé, no entanto, sugerem que, pelo menos os segmentos de coda não podem ser caracterizados simplesmente como "soantes não especificados para nasalidade": um destes fatos é a permanência de uma transição nasal breve entre segmentos orais após o desligamento de uma destas consoantes. Esta tese dá continuidade a algumas das reflexões colocadas por primeira vez em D'Angelis (1998) em relação a outras línguas do tronco Macro-Jê. A discussão sobre a noção de sistema fonológico se inspira no estruturalismo do Círculo Lingüístico de Praga; desenvolvimentos posteriores são pensados sempre à luz das intuições de Trubetzkoy (1939). Entre as reflexões mais recentes em tomo da representação das nasais, levamos em conta aqui principalmente os trabalhos de SteIiade (1993) e Piggott (1992) / Abstract: This thesis has a double purpose. In the first place, it endeavors to describe the phonological systems of two closely related Norther Jê languages: Mebengokre (the language of the Kayapó and Xikrin nations), and Apinayé (the language of the homonymous nation). In the second place, it intends to discuss ritically the notion of phonological system, showing the way in which certain facts that are normally treated in descriptive studies as "phonological processes", divorced from the system (which is often thought of as a mere inventory) , are directly relevant to the oppositions that constitute the phonological system. To exemplify these ideas, we devote our attention to certain processes that involve nasality and voicing in these two languages. Une of the clearest differences between the phonology of Mebengokre and Apinayé regards the behavior of so-called "nasal" consonants: in the first system, nasal consonants clearly contrast with voiced stops. In Apinayé, on the other hand, fully nasal consonants and voiced stops with nasalized contours are in complementary distribution. We argue initially that to represent the contour segments as being specified for the feature [nasal] leads us to an untenable situation: nasality would exhibit, in these segments, a completely passive behavior, retreating even next to [-nasal]; for this reason we opt for a representation in which. nasality could be thought of as an epiphenomenon of the implementation of sonorant voicing. Some facts of the Apinayé language nevertheless suggest that at least coda segments cannot be characterized simply as "sonorants unspecified for nasality": one of these facts is the permanence of a brief nasal transition between oral segments after the delinking of one of these coda consonants. This thesis takes up some ofthe points initially raised by D'Angelis (1998) in relation to other languages in the Macro-Jê stock. The discussion about the notion of phonological system is mainly inspired in the structuralist paradigm of the Prague Linguistic Circle; later developments are always put thought in the light ofTrubetzkoy's (1939) intuitions. Among the more recent reflections regarding the representation of nasals, we here take into account mainly the works of Steriade (1993) and Piggott (1992) / Mestrado / Mestre em Linguística

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