Abstract
This paper presents an acoustic description of the nine Azerbaijani vowels; investigating the underlying acoustic and temporal characteristics of its vowel system. We explored acoustic and temporal parameters including: the first three formants (F1, F2 and F3), fundamental frequency (F0) and duration of the vowels. Participants in this study were 20 male and 23 female Azerbaijani speakers with a Tabrizi dialect. They were asked to utter three repetitions of the nine Azerbaijani vowels in three natural word contexts, embedded in carrier sentences. Results showed that the [ɯ] and [œ] vowels had a large overlap in the F1–F2 vowel space. Further analysis suggested that F3 is an important cue in discrimination of this vowel pair. Vowel-intrinsic duration effect seemed to be relatively strong in Azerbaijani. Other universal features also were found in the production of Azerbaijani vowels: low vowels and female speakers had lower F0 values. Surprisingly, in contrast with previous results for most languages, the average duration of Azerbaijani vowels was greater in males than females. The results of this study define the acoustic vowel-space of the Azerbaijani language and develop a database for further comparisons and investigations.
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© Faculty of English, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Poland
Artikel in diesem Heft
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Research Article
- Nataayej reproducibility Nadaare: Introductory conceptualization and macrolinguistic functions of reverse code-switching
- Research Article
- Are we visible? An interdisciplinary data-based study of self-mention in research articles
- Research Article
- Social variables and Turkish subject pronoun use in New York City: The effect of language contact
- Research Article
- Word-formation in Slavic languages
- Research Article
- An acoustic description of spectral and temporal characteristics of Azerbaijani vowels
- Research Article
- Emotional and linguistic prosody development in Polish children: Three different paths
- Research Article
- The (X) thing is: From a matrix clause to a discourse marker