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The Phonology of Dutch
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The sounds of Dutch: Phonetic characterization and phonological representation 3. The prosodic structure of words 4. Word phonology 5. Word stress 6. Connected speech I: word phonology 7. Sentence phonology 8. Cliticization 9. OrthographyAbstract:
1. Introduction 2. The sounds of Dutch: Phonetic characterization and phonological representation 3. The prosodic structure of words 4. Word phonology 5. Word stress 6. Connected speech I: Word phonology 7. Connected speech II: Sentence phonology 8. Connected speech III: Cliticization 9. Orthographyread more
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
Beyond implicit phonological knowledge: No support for an onset–rime structure in children’s explicit phonological awareness
Astrid Geudens,Dominiek Sandra +1 more
TL;DR: This article found that Dutch children did not treat onsets and rimes as cohesive units of the syllable in tasks tapping explicit awareness, and first-graders found it easier to segment two-phoneme syllables within the rime VC than between onset and rime in the reversed CV.
Journal ArticleDOI
Increased lexical activation and reduced competition in second-language listening
TL;DR: This paper investigated how inaccurate phoneme processing affects recognition of partially onset-overlapping pairs like DAFFOdil-DEFIcit and of minimal pairs like flash-flesh in second-language listening.
Journal ArticleDOI
Acoustic reduction in conversational Dutch: A quantitative analysis based on automatically generated segmental transcriptions
TL;DR: Overall, it is found that reduction is more pervasive in spontaneous Dutch than previously documented.
Journal ArticleDOI
The syllabic structure of spoken words : Evidence from the syllabification of intervocalic consonants
TL;DR: The experiments show that native speakers syllabify bisyllabic Dutch nouns in accordance with a small set of prosodic output constraints, and it is proposed that these constraints differ in their probabilities of being applied.
Journal ArticleDOI
Planning and Articulation in Incremental Word Production: Syllable-Frequency Effects in English.
TL;DR: English speakers were sensitive to the frequency of both syllables, which is interpreted as an indication that the production of English has more extensive planning scopes at the interface of phonetic encoding and articulation.
References
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Book
The Sound Pattern of English
Noam Chomsky,Morris Halle +1 more
TL;DR: Since this classic work in phonology was published in 1968, there has been no other book that gives as broad a view of the subject, combining generally applicable theoretical contributions with analysis of the details of a single language.
Book
Autosegmental and Metrical Phonology
TL;DR: Autosegmental representation the skeletal tier the syllable metrical phonology lexical phonology further issues as discussed by the authors, which is not the case in this paper, are discussed.
Book
A metrical theory of stress rules
TL;DR: Thesis (PhD) as mentioned in this paper, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept of Linguistics and Philosophy, 1980, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, United States, USA.
Dissertation
The representation of features and relations in non-linear phonology
TL;DR: Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Linguistics and Philosophy, 1986.