Oxley Judith, Roussel Nancye, Buckingham Hugh
Department of Communicative Disorders, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, LA 70504, USA.
Clin Linguist Phon. 2007 Jul;21(7):523-42. doi: 10.1080/02699200701356485.
This paper presents a four-subject study that examines the relative influence of syllable position and stress, together with vowel context on the colouring of the dark-l characteristic of speakers of General American English. Most investigators report lighter /l/ tokens in syllable onsets and darker tokens in coda positions. The present study demonstrates that when dark-l serves as an onset in iambic intervocalic context with tautosyllabic high front vowels, it is fully dark as a result of domain-initial strengthening. By contrast, when dark-l is abutted across a word boundary to word-final or word-initial consonants, or when it is contained in a foot-internal context (preboundary intervocalic rime with trochaic stress) its dorsal gesture is constrained, resulting in less dark tokens. In the case of dark-l, articulatory undershoot must be understood not only in terms of the alveolar gesture, but also the dorsal gesture.
本文呈现了一项针对四个受试者的研究,该研究考察了音节位置、重音以及元音语境对通用美式英语使用者的暗-l特征的影响。大多数研究者报告称,音节开头的/l/发音更轻,而在音节末尾的发音更暗。本研究表明,当暗-l在与单音节高前元音构成的抑扬格元音间语境中作开头时,由于域首强化,它会完全发暗音。相比之下,当暗-l跨越词界与词尾或词首辅音相邻,或者当它处于音步内部语境(带扬抑抑格重音的边界前元音间韵)时,其舌背动作受到限制,导致发音不那么暗。就暗-l而言,发音不足不仅要从齿龈动作方面来理解,还要从舌背动作方面来理解。