Spontaneous nasalization after glottal consonants in Thai

•Low/mid-low vowels spontaneously nasalize after glottal consonants in Thai.•Low/mid-low vowels after /h/ are produced with large velopharyngeal opening (VPO).•Vowels after /h/ exhibit larger VPO than vowels after /ʔ/. Spontaneous nasalization is the emergence of distinctive nasalization in contexts...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of phonetics Vol. 75; pp. 57 - 72
Main Authors: Johnson, Sarah E., Barlaz, Marissa, Shosted, Ryan K., Sutton, Brad P.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd 01-07-2019
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Summary:•Low/mid-low vowels spontaneously nasalize after glottal consonants in Thai.•Low/mid-low vowels after /h/ are produced with large velopharyngeal opening (VPO).•Vowels after /h/ exhibit larger VPO than vowels after /ʔ/. Spontaneous nasalization is the emergence of distinctive nasalization in contexts lacking an historical etymological nasal. In Thai, low and mid-low vowels nasalize after /h/ and to a lesser degree after /ʔ/. It has been reasoned that nasalization after /h/ may occur because breathiness and nasalization are acoustically similar; both introduce higher energy at low frequencies and increase spectral tilt. Glottal consonants may generally facilitate nasalization because aerodynamically they do not require velopharyngeal closure. We investigated velopharyngeal opening (VPO) during vowels after /h/ and/ ʔ/ and measured spectral tilt (H1–H2). We measured VPO by processing oblique ultra-fast magnetic resonance images of the velopharyngeal port. Four Thai speakers exhibited a complex system of VPO that varied based on vowel height and preceding consonant. Low vowels after /h/ manifested more physiological nasalization than low vowels after /ʔ/, while the former were often produced with higher spectral tilt, which may be indicative of either increased breathiness or nasalization. While VPO is likely responsible for impressions of greater nasalization after /h/, our findings suggest that breathiness and VPO may interact in the spontaneously nasalized vowels of Thai.
ISSN:0095-4470
1095-8576
DOI:10.1016/j.wocn.2019.05.001