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1 Acoustic phonetics

  • Sonya Bird , Rae Anne Claxton and Tess Nolan
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Abstract

Acoustic phonetics is the subfield of linguistics dedicated to studying the details of speech sounds, by examining their sound waves. Although speech sounds have been studied for over 100 years, there are not many studies of North American Indigenous languages. In this chapter, we describe acoustic phonetics as it relates to Indigenous language revitalization and creating new speakers (Section 1.1). We discuss how to use existing and new recordings to document the acoustic features of speech (Section 1.2). We summarize acoustic phonetic work that exists on North American Indigenous languages, including studies on vowels, consonants, word-level prosody (the rhythm of individual words), and sentence-level intonation (how whole sentences sound) (Section 1.3). We end by discussing how people are coming together for community- based acoustic phonetic research on Indigenous languages, and how it is a key component of language documentation and revitalization (Section 1.4).

Abstract

Acoustic phonetics is the subfield of linguistics dedicated to studying the details of speech sounds, by examining their sound waves. Although speech sounds have been studied for over 100 years, there are not many studies of North American Indigenous languages. In this chapter, we describe acoustic phonetics as it relates to Indigenous language revitalization and creating new speakers (Section 1.1). We discuss how to use existing and new recordings to document the acoustic features of speech (Section 1.2). We summarize acoustic phonetic work that exists on North American Indigenous languages, including studies on vowels, consonants, word-level prosody (the rhythm of individual words), and sentence-level intonation (how whole sentences sound) (Section 1.3). We end by discussing how people are coming together for community- based acoustic phonetic research on Indigenous languages, and how it is a key component of language documentation and revitalization (Section 1.4).

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