Thesis (Selection of subject)Thesis (Selection of subject)(version: 368)
Thesis details
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Sociophonetic study of substitutional glottalization in native English speakers
Thesis title in Czech: Sociofonetická studie substituční glotalizace u rodilých mluvčích angličtiny
Thesis title in English: Sociophonetic study of substitutional glottalization in native English speakers
Key words: britská angličtina, substituční glotalizace, sociofonetika, jazyková změna
English key words: British English, substitutional glottalization, sociophonetics, language change
Academic year of topic announcement: 2013/2014
Thesis type: Bachelor's thesis
Thesis language: angličtina
Department: Department of the English Language and ELT Methodology (21-UAJD)
Supervisor: doc. Mgr. Radek Skarnitzl, Ph.D.
Author: hidden - assigned and confirmed by the Study Dept.
Date of registration: 27.05.2014
Date of assignment: 27.05.2014
Administrator's approval: not processed yet
Confirmed by Study dept. on: 03.06.2014
Date and time of defence: 12.09.2016 08:30
Date of electronic submission:15.08.2016
Date of proceeded defence: 12.09.2016
Submitted/finalized: committed by student and finalized
Opponents: Mgr. Ondřej Tichý, Ph.D.
 
 
 
Guidelines
- prostudovat relevantní literaturu a vypracovat přehled dosavadních nálezů o substituční glotalizaci v angličtině a o vlivu příslušnosti k různým sociálním skupinám na řečový projev
- pořízení a zpracování nahrávek 40 mluvčích (automatická segmentace, manuální úprava cílových kontextů)
- poslechová a akustická analýza cílových slov
- porovnat obecné, skupinové i individuální tendence a vyvodit závěry
References
Dilley, L., Shattuck-Huffnagel, S., & Ostendorf, M. (1996). Glottalization of word-initial vowels as a function of prosodic structure. Journal of Phonetics , 423-444.

Docherty, G. (2007). Prosodic factors and sociophonetic variation: Speech rate and glottal variants in Tyneside English. Proceedings of the 16th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, (1517-1520). Saarbrücken.

Docherty, G., Foulkes, P. (1999). Sociophonetic variation in 'glottals' in Newcastle English. Proceedings of the 14th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, (1037-1040), University of California, Berkeley, 1999.

Docherty, G., Foulkes, P. (1999). Derby and Newcastle: instrumental phonetics and variationist studies. In: Foulkes, P., Docherty, G. (Eds.), Urban voices: accent studies in the British Isles. London: Arnold.

Esling, J. H., & Harris, J. G. (2003). An expanded taxonomy of states of the glottis. Proceedings of the 15th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, (1049-1052). Barcelona.

Gerratt, B. R., & Kreiman, J. (2001). Toward a taxonomy of nonmodal phonation. Journal of Phonetics , 29 (4), 365-381.

Henton, C. G., & Bladon, R. A. (1987). Creak as a Sociophonetic Marker in Language. In I.L. Hyman, & C. N. Li (Eds.), Speech and Mind: Studies in Honor of Victoria Fromkin (pp. 3-29). London: Routledge.

Henton, C., Ladefoged, P., & Maddieson, I. (1992). Stops in the World's Languages. Phonetica , 49 (2), 65-101.

Hillenbrand, J. M., & Houde, R. A. (1996). The role of f0 and amplitude in the perception of intervocalic glottal stops. Journal of Speech and Hearing Research , 39, 1182-1190.

Huffman, M.K. (2005). Segmental and prosodic effects on coda glottalization. Journal of Phonetics, 33(3), 335–362.

Ladefoged, P., & Maddieson, I. (1996). The Sounds of the World’s Langauges. Oxford: Blackwell.

Machač, P., & Skarnitzl, R. (2009). Principles of Phonetic Segmentation. Praha: Epocha.

Pierrehumbert, J., & Talkin, D. (1992). Lenition of /h/ and glottal stop. In G. Docherty & D.R. Ladd (Eds.), Papers in laboratory phonology II (90-117). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Redi, L., & Shattuck-Hufnagel, S. (2001). Variation in the realization of glottalization in normal speakers. Journal of Phonetics , 29 (4), 407-429.
 
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