Uncovering the acoustic vowel space of a previously undescribed language: The vowels of Nambo

  • Kashima E
  • Williams D
  • Mark Ellison T
  • et al.
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Abstract

This study presents the first acoustic description of the vowel space of a Papuan language—Nambo, spoken in southern Papua New Guinea—based on duration and first and second formant measurements from 19 adult male and female speakers across three age groups (young, middle-aged, senior). Phonemically, Nambo has six full vowels /i, e, æ, ɑ, o, u/ and a reduced vowel tentatively labeled /ə/. Unlike the full vowels, the quality of /ə/ showed great variation: seniors' and young females' realizations tended to be more open and retracted than those by young males, while middle-aged speakers' productions fell between these two variants.

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APA

Kashima, E., Williams, D., Mark Ellison, T., Schokkin, D., & Escudero, P. (2016). Uncovering the acoustic vowel space of a previously undescribed language: The vowels of Nambo. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 139(6), EL252–EL256. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4954395

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