2019
DOI: 10.18537/puc.30.01.06
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Percepciones de los profesores de inglés sobre experiencias de capacitación: un estudio de caso

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“…However, Robinson (1979) andToscano Toscano Mateus (1953) explain that the Quiteño (from Quito) and Cuencano (from Cuenca) dialects have categorical voicing of intervocalic word-final /s/, and Cuencano has intervocalic word-medial /s/ voicing as in bisabuelo 'great-grandfather'. Robinson (1979) also claims that /s/ voicing does not occur in the Carchi or Loja dialects (so do Lipski 1989;Calle 2010;Aguirre 2000); nevertheless, García (2020) examines social factors for conditioning this voicing among Loja natives. In Quiteño Spanish, Chappell (2011) finds fully voiced variants in 91% of intervocalic word-final /s/; while Strycharczuk et al (2014) show different patterns of voicing: some Quiteño speakers voice /s/ gradiently, others optionally in word-final contexts.…”
Section: /S/ Voicing In Intervocalic Contextsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, Robinson (1979) andToscano Toscano Mateus (1953) explain that the Quiteño (from Quito) and Cuencano (from Cuenca) dialects have categorical voicing of intervocalic word-final /s/, and Cuencano has intervocalic word-medial /s/ voicing as in bisabuelo 'great-grandfather'. Robinson (1979) also claims that /s/ voicing does not occur in the Carchi or Loja dialects (so do Lipski 1989;Calle 2010;Aguirre 2000); nevertheless, García (2020) examines social factors for conditioning this voicing among Loja natives. In Quiteño Spanish, Chappell (2011) finds fully voiced variants in 91% of intervocalic word-final /s/; while Strycharczuk et al (2014) show different patterns of voicing: some Quiteño speakers voice /s/ gradiently, others optionally in word-final contexts.…”
Section: /S/ Voicing In Intervocalic Contextsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Considering gender, some studies find more voicing in male speech (Chappell and García 2017;Schmidt 2016;García 2015) while McKinnon (2012) shows the opposite. When age is considered, García (2015) claims that younger speakers voice more, contrasting with Calle (2010) who indicates that older speakers have the highest rates. Finally, Davidson (2019) finds more voicing in Spanish-Quechua bilinguals than in Spanish monolinguals from Quito, considering the effect of bilingualism as a trigger for voicing.…”
Section: /S/ Voicing In Intervocalic Contextsmentioning
confidence: 99%