2022
DOI: 10.1177/00238309221114433
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Production and Perception Evidence of a Merger: [l] and [n] in Fuzhou Min

Abstract: The current study investigated the merger-in-progress between word-initial nasal and lateral consonants in Fuzhou Min, examining the linguistic and social factors that modulate the merger. First, the acoustic cues to the l-n distinction were examined in Fuzhou Min. Acoustic analyses suggested a collapse of phonemic contrast between prescriptive L and N (phonemes in the unmerged system), with none of the six acoustic cues showing any difference across L and N. Linear discriminant analysis did identify acoustica… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…[l] and[n] having homorganic articulation adds to their acoustic similarity, since formant structure is heavily determined by tongue position. These similarities may also underlie [l]~[n] mergers that have been observed in other languages, including their recent/ongoing merger in many Sinitic languages, even though the outcome there tends towards [l](To et al, 2015;Cheng et al, 2022;Huang et al, 2023).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[l] and[n] having homorganic articulation adds to their acoustic similarity, since formant structure is heavily determined by tongue position. These similarities may also underlie [l]~[n] mergers that have been observed in other languages, including their recent/ongoing merger in many Sinitic languages, even though the outcome there tends towards [l](To et al, 2015;Cheng et al, 2022;Huang et al, 2023).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%