Abstract

The present study compares the acoustic realization of Saterland Frisian, Low German, and High German vowels by trilingual speakers in the Saterland. The Saterland is a rural municipality in northwestern Germany. It offers the unique opportunity to study trilingualism with languages that differ both by their vowel inventories and by external factors, such as their social status and the autonomy of their speech communities. The objective of the study was to examine whether the trilingual speakers differ in their acoustic realizations of vowel categories shared by the three languages and whether those differences can be interpreted as effects of either the differences in the vowel systems or of external factors. Monophthongs produced in a /hVt/ frame revealed that High German vowels show the most divergent realizations in terms of vowel duration and formant frequencies, whereas Saterland Frisian and Low German vowels show small differences. These findings suggest that vowels of different languages are likely to share the same phonological space when the speech communities largely overlap, as is the case with Saterland Frisian and Low German, but may resist convergence if at least one language is shared with a larger, monolingual speech community, as is the case with High German.

Highlights

  • Over the past few decades, the acoustic study of vowel realization has developed into one of the most fruitful areas for the study of multilingualism and language contact (Guion, 2003; Bullock and Gerfen, 2004; Mayr et al, 2015)

  • Results for F2 suggest that the front vowels /I/, /y+/, /Y/, /E+/, and /E/ are more fronted in High German (HG) than in Saterland Frisian (SF) and the back vowels /u+/, /o+/ are realized further back

  • The acoustic analysis of the trilingual productions of monophthongs shared by SF, Low German (LG), and HG has revealed cross-linguistic differences in vowel duration and spectral properties

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Summary

Introduction

Over the past few decades, the acoustic study of vowel realization has developed into one of the most fruitful areas for the study of multilingualism and language contact (Guion, 2003; Bullock and Gerfen, 2004; Mayr et al, 2015). Trilingualism is interesting because it offers the possibility of examining the interaction of an L1 with an L2 and L3 which differ by language-internal factors such as the size of their vowel inventories, and by language-external factors such as age of acquisition or social status. The participants of the present study are drawn from the rural municipality of the Saterland in northwestern Germany. They are trilingual with Saterland Frisian, Saterland Low German, and Saterland High German.

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