Abstract

The present study investigates the role of articulatory and perceptual factors in the change from pre- to post-aspiration in two varieties of Andalusian Spanish. In an acoustic study, the influence of stop type, speaker age, and variety on the production of pre- and post-aspiration was analyzed in isolated words produced by 24 speakers of a Western and 24 of an Eastern variety, both divided into two age groups. The results confirmed previous findings of a sound change from pre- to post-aspiration in both varieties. Velar stops showed the longest, bilabials the shortest, and dental stops intermediate pre- and post-aspiration durations. The observed universal VOT-pattern was not found for younger Western Andalusian speakers who showed a particularly long VOT in /st/-sequences. A perception experiment with the same subjects as listeners showed that post-aspiration was used as a cue for distinguishing the minimal pair /pata/-/pasta/ by almost all listeners. Production-perception comparisons suggested a relationship between production and perception: subjects who produced long post-aspiration were also more sensitive to this cue. In sum, the results suggest that the sound change has first been actuated in the dental context, possibly due to a higher perceptual prominence of post-aspiration in this context, and that post-aspirated stops in Andalusian Spanish are on their way to being phonologized.

Highlights

  • The present study investigates the role of articulatory and perceptual factors in the change from pre- to post-aspiration in two varieties of Andalusian Spanish

  • 2.2.1.3 Discussion hC-sequences and intervocalic stops clearly differed in terms of voice termination time, the former displaying mostly positive, the latter mostly negative values. ­Overall, younger speakers produced hC-sequences with a shorter VTT than older speakers, but this difference was significant only in Western Andalusian Spanish (WAS), not in Eastern Andalusian Spanish (EAS), suggesting that in WAS pre-aspiration is fading in apparent-time

  • There was no interaction among place of articulation, age, and variety indicating that pre-aspiration is shortening to an equal degree across stop types

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Summary

Introduction

The observed universal VOT- pattern was not found for younger Western Andalusian speakers who showed a long VOT in /st/-sequences. Production-perception comparisons suggested a relationship between production and perception: subjects who produced long post-aspiration were more sensitive to this cue. The present study investigates the role of articulatory and perceptual factors in the change from pre- to post-aspiration in two varieties of Andalusian Spanish. Velar stops showed the longest, bilabials the shortest, and dental stops intermediate pre- and post-aspiration durations. ­Spanish has been studied within the theoretical framework of the functionalist hypothesis (e.g., Hernández-Campoy & Trudgill, 2002; Ma & Herasimchuk, 1971; Poplack, 1981; Terrell, 1979) since it functions as a plural marker for nouns, and in the context of resyllabification (e.g., Harris, 1983; Hualde, 1991) as a loss of syllable-final /s/ goes along with a change in syllable structure from CVC to CV

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