The vowel spaces of Southern Californian English and Mexican Spanish as produced by monolinguals and bilinguals

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Abstract

The vowel spaces of Southern Californian English and Mexican Spanish were investigated using three groups of speakers: 11 English monolinguals (9 female), 10 Spanish monolinguals (7 female), and 11 Spanish-English bilinguals (8 female). Speakers produced six repetitions of the ten American English vowels [i, I, ε, æ, a, C, Ω, u, λ, and 3r] and six repetitions of the five Spanish vowels [i, e, a, u, and o]. Monolinguals produced vowels in one language; bilinguals produced vowels in both languages. Preliminary analysis shows for females Southern Californian English back vowels were less fronted compared to the results of Hagiwara (1997) from Southern Californian English, but more fronted than those of Hillenbrand et al. (1995) on General American English. Mexican Spanish back vowels [u] and [o] were substantially backed compared to Castilian Spanish vowels (Bradlow, 1995), while [i] was lower and more fronted. In general, Mexican Spanish vowels were produced more backed than Southern Californian English vowels in monolingual productions. Bilinguals produced their two vowel spaces with Spanish more backed and lower as compared to English. © 2013 Acoustical Society of America.

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Grijalva, C., Piccinini, P. E., & Arvaniti, A. (2013). The vowel spaces of Southern Californian English and Mexican Spanish as produced by monolinguals and bilinguals. In Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics (Vol. 19). https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4800752

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