Abstract
Coronal Stop Deletion (CSD) is believed to be constrained by the phonological environment and the word’s morphological make-up (i.e., monomorphemic, semi-weak past tense, regular past tense) (Guy 1991; Hazen 2011). In this talk, we present results from an analysis of CSD in the speech of four speakers of Hawai'i English. In addition to using a traditional approach (i.e., auditory analysis of CSD in word-final position), we also analyzed CSD in non-final position (e.g., followed by plural -s) and conducted acoustic phonetic analysis of /t/ in tokens where it was realized. The results demonstrate highly significant effects of environment. Additionally, there is no effect of morpheme type; instead, the results provide evidence that deletion is favored in words with a greater number of morphemes, regardless of whether the coronal stop is found in the stem or the affix. Additionally, the acoustic analysis suggests that the effect of following environment is acoustically gradient: tokens followed by a voiceless, non-alveolar consonant (i.e., the environment that most strongly disfavors deletion in our data) are most likely to be realized with complete occlusion in the vocal tract. Implications for models of speech production are discussed.
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