North American /l/ both darkens and lightens depending on morphological constituency and segmental context

Mackenzie, Sara and Olson, Erin and Clayards, Meghan and Wagner, Michael (2018) North American /l/ both darkens and lightens depending on morphological constituency and segmental context. Laboratory Phonology, 9 (1). ISSN 1868-6354

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Abstract

It is uncontroversial that, in many varieties of English, the realization of /l/ varies depending on whether /l/ occurs word-initially or word-finally. The nature of this effect, however, remains controversial. Previous analyses alternately analyzed the variation as darkening or lightening, and alternately found evidence that the variation involves a categorical distinction between allophones or a gradient scale conditioned by phonetic factors. We argue that these diverging conclusions are a result of the numerous factors influencing /l/ darkness and differences between studies in terms of which factors are considered. By controlling for a range of factors, our study demonstrates a pattern of variability that has not been shown in previous work. We find evidence of morpheme-final darkening and morpheme-initial lightening when compared to a baseline of morpheme-internal /l/. We also find segmental effects such that, in segmental contexts which independently darken /l/, one can observe /l/ lightening, and contexts which independently lighten /l/ can make lightening effects undetectable. Morphological and prosodic effects are hence sometimes trumped by segmental context. Once contextual effects are controlled for, there is evidence both for morphologically-conditioned /l/-darkening and for morphologically-conditioned /l/-lightening, both of which can be understood as a result of prosodic differences reflecting morphological junctures.

Item Type: Article
URI: http://research.library.mun.ca/id/eprint/13696
Item ID: 13696
Additional Information: Memorial University Open Access Author's Fund
Keywords: /l/-darkening, allophonic variation, morphological constituency, prosodic boundaries, vowel reduction
Department(s): Humanities and Social Sciences, Faculty of > Linguistics
Date: 15 August 2018
Date Type: Publication
Geographic Location: North America
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