Search Results - "Brunelle, Marc"

  • Showing 1 - 11 results of 11
Refine Results
  1. 1

    Tone perception in Northern and Southern Vietnamese by Brunelle, Marc

    Published in Journal of phonetics (2009)
    “…The experiment presented in this paper shows that Northern and Southern Vietnamese tones in isolation are identified by listeners through a small set of…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  2. 2

    Dialect experience and perceptual integrality in phonological registers: Fundamental frequency, voice quality and the first formant in Cham by Brunelle, Marc

    “…The perceptual integrality of f0, F1 and voice quality is investigated by looking at register, a phonological contrast that relies on these three properties in…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  3. 3

    Tone and Phonation in Southeast Asian Languages by Brunelle, Marc, Kirby, James

    Published in Language and linguistics compass (01-04-2016)
    “…Southeast Asia is often considered a quintessential Sprachbund where languages from five different language phyla have been converging typologically for…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  4. 4

    Transphonologization of voicing in Chru: Studies in production and perception by Brunelle, Marc, Tấn, Tạ Thành, Kirby, James, Giang, Đinh Lư

    Published in Laboratory phonology (13-10-2020)
    “…Chru, a Chamic language of south-central Vietnam, has been described as combining contrastive obstruent voicing with incipient registral properties (Fuller,…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  5. 5

    A laryngographic and laryngoscopic study of Northern Vietnamese tones by Brunelle, Marc, Nguyên, Duy Duong, Nguyên, Khac Hùng

    Published in Phonetica (01-01-2010)
    “…A laryngographic and laryngoscopic study of tone production in Northern Vietnamese, a language whose tones combine both fundamental frequency (f0) modulations…”
    Get more information
    Journal Article
  6. 6

    Stress and phrasal prominence in tone languages: The case of Southern Vietnamese by Brunelle, Marc

    “…There is no consensus on the nature, or even the existence, of Vietnamese word stress. While some authors have proposed that it is morphosyntactically…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  7. 7

    Transphonologization of onset voicing: revisiting Northern and Eastern Kmhmu by Kirby, James, Pittayaporn, Pittayawat, Brunelle, Marc

    Published in Phonetica (16-12-2022)
    “…Phonation and vowel quality are often thought to play a vital role at the initial stage of tonogenesis. This paper investigates the production of voicing and…”
    Get more information
    Journal Article
  8. 8

    Phonotactic restrictions condition the realization of vowel nasality and nasal coarticulation: Duration and airflow measurements in Québécois French and Brazilian Portuguese by Desmeules-Trudel, Félix, Brunelle, Marc

    Published in Journal of phonetics (01-07-2018)
    “…•The contexts in which contrasts occur have an influence on their phonetic realization.•Phonotactically constrained nasality contrasts allow for more…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  9. 9

    Voicing and register in Ngãi Giao Chrau: Production and perception studies by Tạ, Thành Tấn, Brunelle, Marc, Nguyễn, Trần Quý

    Published in Journal of phonetics (01-01-2022)
    “…•Ngãi Giao Chrau has lost its onset voicing contrast and developed a register system.•Register cues include phonation type, vowel quality, and pitch…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  10. 10

    Inconspicuous coarticulation: A complex path to sound change in the tone system of Hanoi Vietnamese by Brunelle, Marc, Hạ, Kiều Phương, Grice, Martine

    Published in Journal of phonetics (01-11-2016)
    “…In Hanoi Vietnamese, the rising and falling tones are frequently confused before the (high) level tone, even though they are clearly distinct in other…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  11. 11

    Register in Eastern Cham: Phonological, phonetic and sociolinguistic approaches by Brunelle, Marc

    Published 01-01-2005
    “…The Chamic language family is often cited as a test case for contact linguistics. Although Chamic languages are Austronesian, they are claimed to have…”
    Get full text
    Dissertation