Vowel Quality in Xiang Non-Lexical Hesitation Markers: New Forms of Typological Evidence?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
2.1. Classificatory Overview of Xiang
2.2. Comparison of Vowel Inventories
2.3. Hesitation Markers: Usage and Insights
3. Methodology
3.1. Xiang Varieties in the Sample
3.2. Demographic Information
4. Results
4.1. Overview
4.2. Vowel Quality
4.3. Vowel Quality by Typological Affiliation
- Northeastern (Group 1): mid-central vowel only (Changsha, Yiyang, Xiangyin, Yueyang)
- Southwestern (Group 2): mid-front vowel only (Yongzhou, Shaodong, Shaoyang, Xiangtan, Taojiang, Zhuzhou)
- Transitional (Group 3): both mid-central and mid-front vowels (Ningxiang, Hengyang, Shuangfeng, Chengbu)
4.4. A Closer Look at HM Incidence by Grouping
5. Discussion and Conclusions
5.1. High Variability in Hesitation Markers
5.2. Phonemic Vowel Quality or Default Articulatory Setting?
5.3. Transitional Status of Xiang
5.4. Residual Issues
5.5. Final Remarks
Supplementary Materials
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
No of Items | Mean F1 | Mean F2 | |
---|---|---|---|
Lex Front | 69 | 478.9 | 2053.8 |
HM Front | 40 | 615.1 | 1861.9 |
Lex Central | 78 | 466.3 | 1507.6 |
HM Central | 185 | 616.8 | 1399.8 |
t-Value | df | P | Var | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Front F1 | −6.6039 | 107 | <0.0001 | Equal |
Front F2 | 4.3417 | 106.08 | <0.0001 | Unequal |
Central F1 | −12.758 | 180.62 | <0.0001 | Unequal |
Central F2 | 3.8654 | 114.74 | 0.0001843 | Unequal |
1 | In what follows, the terms ‘typological classification’ or ‘typological grouping’ are used freely to stress the fact that the present approach does not involve genetic subgrouping; establishing ‘typological regions’ in Xiang here refers to defining regions by collections of shared features, rather than by establishing descent from a common parent language through a unique linguistic innovation. The former is essentially the traditional approach to Xiang classification (see e.g., Yuan 1960; Chen and Bao 2007), where regions are defined by bundles of shared features, whereas the latter is more recent (see e.g., Coblin 2011), although the two approaches are sometimes confused in Sinitic taxonomical studies. |
2 | For the purposes of this study, these subgroupings are treated as such, although some of the authors of the classificatory schemes may disagree. |
3 | Henceforth, just ‘HMs’ or ‘hesitation markers’ will be used to refer only to non-lexical HMs. |
4 | One may wonder if it is realistic to consider Cantonese representative of the form of hesitation markers in the Southern group, given that this group is quite diverse. However, in terms of the mid-vowel contrasts considered here, southern Sinitic varieties behave similarly; see Figure 2. Therefore, any other southern Sinitic variety of those mentioned in the discussion of Figure 2 could just as easily serve as a representative. |
5 | Shi et al. (2015) mention that Mandarin has a mid-front vowel approaching [ɛ] ‘used only as an interjection’ but have no instances of it in their corpus and do not provide an example. |
6 | The naming convention is to take the first syllable from the name of two dialects considered representative of the grouping; Changsha and Yiyang for Changyi, Loudi and Shaoyang for Loushao, and Jishou and Xupu for Jixu. |
7 | Map from: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:China_blank_map_grey.svg (accessed on 21 November 2021). |
8 | This should not be interpreted as a claim that most northern dialects do not have a mid-front vowel anywhere in their inventories, or that southern dialects do not have mid-central vowels at all, only that they do not possess them contrastively in open CV syllables. For instance, some dialects may have one of these qualities obligatorily accompanied by an offglide or a final nasal, and others may reduce vowels to schwa in fast speech; however, the current focus is on vowel qualities that have no such contextual restrictions. |
9 | Each pair of brackets (separated by a comma if occupying the same square) represents a contrastive vowel quality in the dialect in question; if two qualities are within the same pair and are separated by a tilde <~>, this means the two qualities are in free variation. |
10 | Map outline from: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Map_Hunan_adm.png (accessed on 21 November 2021). |
11 | Strictly speaking, any lexical item can be lengthened to fill a pause, so any item from the lexical vocabulary might in theory serve an HM function. The examples provided here are predicted to occur most often as they are often used to introduce speech; neither list is exhaustive. |
12 | |
13 | Standard deviation can be observed in Figure 6 as the dark gray shaded areas above and below the contour lines. |
14 | All figures from this point created with Norm (Thomas and Kendall 2007). |
15 | |
16 | NE = ‘northeastern’, SW = ‘southwestern’, TR = ‘transitional’, HT = ‘heritage’. |
17 | By extension, the traditional Old-New classification (Yuan 1960) likewise cannot be supported by HM vowel data, even though this was not overtly explored in the study. This should follow from the high degree of similarity between Chen and Bao’s (2007) classification and the traditional classification. |
18 | An in-depth acoustic analysis, focusing solely on Mandarin HM vowels (restricted by location, e.g., Beijing), is necessary before the exact number can be determined. The observations of the two cited studies are too broad, as the analyzed regions in China are not restricted geographically, subsumed under the ‘Mandarin’ heading; however, even here, the number of vowel qualities seems more restricted than in the comparatively smaller Xiang-speaking region. |
References
- Anwyl-Irvine, Alexander, Jessica Massonnié, Adam Flitton, Natasha Kirkham, and Jo Evershed. 2019. Gorilla in our midst: An online behavioural experiment builder. Behavior Research Methods 52: 388–407. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Australian Academy of the Humanities and the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. 1988. Language Atlas of China. Pacific Linguistics, Series C, No. 102. Hong Kong: Longman Group (Far East) Ltd. [Google Scholar]
- Bao, Houxing. 1985. Hunan sheng Hanyu ditu san fu [Three Chinese dialect maps of Hunan province]. Fangyan 4: 273–6. [Google Scholar]
- Bao, Houxing. 2017. Bao Houxing: Hunan Fangyan Lun Gao [Bao Houxing: Essays on the Hunan Dialects]. Changsha: Hunan Normal University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Bei, X., and F. Shi. 2011. Fangyan Jiechu Zhong de Yuan Yin Biaoxian [The Vowel Pattern in Dialect Contact]. Journal of Chinese Linguistics 39: 442–50. [Google Scholar]
- Boersma, Paul, and David Weenink. 2022. Praat: Doing Phonetics by Computer [Computer Program]. Version 6.1.38. Available online: http://www.praat.org/ (accessed on 2 January 2021).
- Braun, Angelika, and Annabelle Rosin. 2015. On the speaker specificity of hesitation markers. Paper presented at the 18th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Glasgow, UK, 10–14 August; pp. 731–34. [Google Scholar]
- Calder, Jeremy, Rebecca Wheeler, Sarah Adams, Daniel Amarelo, Katherine Arnold-Murray, Justin Bai, Meredith Church, Josh Daniels, Sarah Gomez, Jacob Henry, and et al. 2022. Is Zoom viable for sociophonetic research? A comparison of in-person and online recordings for vocalic analysis. Linguistics Vanguard 2022: 2020-0148. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Candea, Maria, Ioana Vasilescu, and Martine Adda-Decker. 2005. Inter-and intra-language acoustic analysis of autonomous fillers. Proceedings of Disfluency in Spontaneous Speech (DISS) 4: 47–52. [Google Scholar]
- Chafe, Wallace, ed. 1980. The Pear Stories: Cognitive, Cultural and Linguistic Aspects of Narrative Production. Norwood: Ablex. [Google Scholar]
- Chappell, Hillary. 2001. Language contact and areal diffusion in Sinitic languages. In Areal Diffusion and Genetic Inheritance: Problems in Comparative Linguistics. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 328–357. [Google Scholar]
- Chappell, Hillary, ed. 2015. Diversity in Sinitic Languages. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Chen, Hui, and Houxing Bao. 2007. Hunansheng de Hanyu Fangyan [Chinese Dialects of Hunan Province]. Fangyan 3: 250–59. [Google Scholar]
- Chen, Hui, and Houxing Bao. 2012. Xiangyu [Xiang]. In Language Atlas of China, 2nd ed. Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, City University of Hong Kong Center for Language and Information Science. Beijing: Commercial Press. [Google Scholar]
- Chinese Academy for Social Sciences and City University of Hong Kong Center for Language and Information Science. 2012. Zhongguo Yuyan Dituji [Language Atlas of China], 2nd ed. Beijing: Commercial Press. [Google Scholar]
- Chomsky, Noam. 1965. Aspects of the Theory of Syntax. Cambridge: MIT Press. [Google Scholar]
- Chu, Zeyang. 1998. Shaoyang Fangyan Yanjiu [A Study of the Shaoyang Dialect]. Changsha: Hunan Education Press. [Google Scholar]
- Clark, Herbert, and Jean Fox Tree. 2002. Using uh and um in spontaneous speaking. Cognition 84: 73–111. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Coblin, Weldon South. 2011. Comparative Phonology of the Central Xiang Dialects: Language and Linguistics Monograph Series (45). Taipei: Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica. [Google Scholar]
- Coblin, Weldon South. 2015. A Study of Comparative Gan: Language and Linguistics Monograph Series (58). Taipei: Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica. [Google Scholar]
- Cui, Zhenhua. 1998. Yiyang Fangyan Yanjiu [A Study of the Yiyang Dialect]. Changsha: Hunan Education Press. [Google Scholar]
- Dingemanse, Mark. 2017. On the margins of language: Ideophones, interjections and dependencies in linguistic theory. In Dependencies in Language. Berlin: Language Science Press, pp. 195–202. [Google Scholar]
- Dingemanse, Mark, and Marieke Woensdregt. 2020. The Cultural Evolution of Collateral Signals. In Evolution of Language: Proceedings of the 13th International Conference (Evolang13). Brussels: The Evolution of Language Conferences, p. n.a. [Google Scholar]
- Duanmu, San. 2007. The Phonology of Standard Chinese. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Erbaugh, Mary. 2001. The Chinese Pear Stories: Narratives Across Seven Chinese Dialects. Available online: http://pearstories.org/docu/biblio.htm (accessed on 21 January 2021).
- Erbaugh, Mary. 2013. Classifier choices in discourse across the seven main Chinese dialects. In Increased Empiricism: Recent Advances in Chinese Linguistics. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp. 101–26. [Google Scholar]
- Fang, Pingquan. 1999. Yueyang Fangyan Yanjiu [A Study of the Yueyang Dialect]. Changsha: Hunan Normal University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Freeman, Valerie, and Paul DeDecker. 2021. Remote sociophonetic data collection: Vowels and nasalization over video conferencing apps. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 149: 1211–23. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman, and Nina Hyams. 2014. An Introduction to Language. Boston: Cengage Learning. [Google Scholar]
- Gick, Bryan, Ian Wilson, Karsten Koch, and Clare Cook. 2004. Language-specific articulatory settings: Evidence from inter-utterance rest position. Phonetica 61: 220–33. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Handel, Zev. 2017. The Sinitic languages: Phonology. In The Sino-Tibetan Languages. Edited by Graham Thurgood and Randy LaPolla. London: Routledge, pp. 85–114. [Google Scholar]
- Hillenbrand, James, Laura Getty, Michael Clark, and Kimberlee Wheeler. 1995. Acoustic characteristics of American English vowels. The Journal of the Acoustical society of America 97: 3099–111. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Ho, Dah-an. 2015. Chinese Dialects. In The Oxford Handbook of Chinese Linguistics. Edited by William Wang and Chaofen Sun. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 149–59. [Google Scholar]
- Honikman, Beatrice. 1964. Articulatory settings. In In Honour of Daniel Jones. London: Longman, pp. 73–84. [Google Scholar]
- Huang, Xinxin. 2012. Hunan Ningxiang Fangyan de Dili Yuyanxue Yanjiu [A Geographical Linguistic Study of the Ningxiang Dialect]. Master’s thesis, Central South University, Changsha, China. [Google Scholar]
- Kurpaska, Maria. 2010. Chinese Language(s): A Look through the Prism of the Great Dictionary of Chinese Dialects. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. [Google Scholar]
- Lee, Wai-sum, and Eric Zee. 2014. Chinese Phonetics. In The Handbook of Chinese Linguistics. Edited by Li Huang and Andrew Simpson. Chichester: Wiley Blackwell, pp. 369–99. [Google Scholar]
- Li, Yongming. 1986. Hengyang Fangyan [The Hengyang Dialect]. Changsha: Hunan People’s Publishing House. [Google Scholar]
- Lu, Xiaoqun. 2001. Hunan Zhuzhou (Longquan) Fangyan Yinxi [Phonetics of the Zhuzhou (Longquan) Dialect]. Journal of Zhuzhou Institute of Technology 15: 63–78. [Google Scholar]
- Maddieson, Ian, and Kristin Precoda. 2018. UPSID Database [Software]. Available online: http://web.phonetik.uni-frankfurt.de/upsid.html (accessed on 15 December 2021).
- Maschler, Yael, and Deborah Schiffrin. 2015. Discourse markers: Language, meaning, and context. The Handbook of Discourse Analysis 2: 189–221. [Google Scholar]
- Matthews, Stephen, and Virginia Yip. 2013. Cantonese: A Comprehensive Grammar. London: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- McDougall, Kirsty, and Martin Duckworth. 2017. Profiling fluency: An analysis of individual variation in disfluencies in adult males. Speech Communication 95: 16–27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Müller, Friedrich Max. 1861. Lectures on the Science of Language. London: Longmans. [Google Scholar]
- Norman, Jerry. 1988. Chinese. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- R Core Team. 2022. R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. [Computer program]. Vienna: R Foundation for Statistical Computing. Available online: https://www.R-project.org/ (accessed on 2 January 2022).
- Reetz, Henning, and Allard Jongman. 2020. Phonetics: Transcription, Production, Acoustics, and Perception. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. [Google Scholar]
- Sanker, Chelsea, Sarah Babinski, Roslyn Burns, Marisha Evans, Jeremy Johns, Juhyae Kim, Slater Smith, Natalie Weber, and Claire Bowern. 2021. (Don’t) try this at home! The effects of recording devices and software on phonetic analysis. Language 97: e360–e382. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Sevilla, Robert Marcelo. 2023. Bare-classifier constructions in Xiang (Sinitic): From typology to formalization. Taiwan Journal of Linguistics 21: 47–94. [Google Scholar]
- Sevilla, Robert Marcelo. 2021. Acoustic Patterns in Hong Kong Cantonese Hesitation Markers: Vowel Quality and Omnisyllabic Tone. Journal of Chinese Linguistics. forthcoming. [Google Scholar]
- Shi, Feng, Gang Peng, and Yi Liu. 2015. Vowel distributions in isolated and continuous speech. In The Oxford Handbook of Chinese Linguistics. Edited by William Wang and Chaofen Sun. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 459–73. [Google Scholar]
- Shriberg, Elizabeth. 2001. To ‘errrr’ is human: Ecology and acoustics of speech disfluencies. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 31: 153–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Song, Shuqin. 2006. Xiangyin Yuyin Yanjiu [Study of Xiangyin Phonetics]. Ph.D. thesis, Hunan Normal University, Changsha, China. [Google Scholar]
- Sun, Yelin. 2002. Shaodong Fangyan yu Putonghua de Yuyin Bijiao [A comparison of the phonology of the Shaodong dialect and Mandarin]. Journal of Shaoyang University 24: 123–25. [Google Scholar]
- Sun, Lixin. 2007. Xi’an Fangyan Yanjiu [A Study on the Xi’an Dialect]. Xi’an: Xi’an Press. [Google Scholar]
- Szeto, Pui Yiu. 2019. Typological Variation across Sinitic Languages: Contact and Convergence. Ph.D. thesis, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, Hong Kong. [Google Scholar]
- Szeto, Pui Yiu, and Chingduang Yurayong. 2021. Sinitic as a typological sandwich: Revisiting the notions of Altaicization and Taicization. Linguistic Typology 25: 551–601. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tencent Holdings Limited. 2022. WeChat. Available online: https://www.wechat.com (accessed on 21 January 2021).
- Thomas, Erik, and Tyler Kendall. 2007. NORM: The Vowel Normalization and Plotting Suite. [Computer Program]. Eugene: University of Oregon. Available online: http://ncslaap.lib.ncsu.edu/tools/norm/ (accessed on 2 March 2022).
- Vasilescu, Ioana, Maria Candea, and Martine Adda-Decker. 2005. Perceptual Salience of Language-Specific Acoustic Differences in Autonomous Fillers across Eight Languages. Lisbonne: Interspeech, p.n.a. ffhal-00875151. [Google Scholar]
- Wang, Zhufeng. 2013. Xiangtan Fangyan de ji ge Yuyin Wenti Yanjiu [Research on Several Phonetic Questions on the Xiangtan Dialect]. Master’s thesis, Tianjin Normal University, Tianjin, China. [Google Scholar]
- Wang, Xi. 2020. Hunan Yongzhou Hua Yanjiu [A Study of the Yongzhou Dialect]. Master’s thesis, Guangxi University, Nanning, China. [Google Scholar]
- Wieling, Martijn, Jack Grieve, Gosse Bouma, Josef Fruehwald, John Coleman, and Mark Liberman. 2016. Variation and change in the use of Hesitation markers in Germanic languages. Language Dynamics and Change 6: 199–234. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Wikimedia Foundation. 2014. Location Map of Hunan, China. Wikimedia Commons, January 12.
- Wu, Yunji. 1999. The Development of Aspectual Systems in Chinese-Xiang Dialects. Paris: École des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Centre de Recherches Linguistiques sur l’Asie Orientale. [Google Scholar]
- Wu, Yunji. 2005. A Synchronic and Diachronic Study of the Grammar of the Chinese Xiang Dialect. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. [Google Scholar]
- Yuan, Jiahua. 1960. Hanyu Fangyan Gaiyao [An Outline of Chinese Dialects]. Beijing: Wenzi Gaige Chubanshe. [Google Scholar]
- Yuan, Jiahong, Xiaoying Xu, Wei Lai, and Mark Liberman. 2016. Pauses and pause fillers in Mandarin monologue speech: The effects of sex and proficiency. Proceedings of Speech Prosody 2016: 1167–70. [Google Scholar]
- Yue-Hashimoto, Anne. 1976. Southern Chinese dialects: The Tai connection. Computational Analyses of Asian and African Languages 6: 1–9. [Google Scholar]
- Zee, Eric, and Liejiong Xu. 2017. Shanghainese. In The Sino-Tibetan Languages. Edited by Graham Thurgood and Randy LaPolla. London: Routledge, pp. 185–200. [Google Scholar]
- Zhao, Yuan, and Dan Jurafsky. 2005. A preliminary study of Mandarin filled pauses. Paper presented at Disfluency in Spontaneous Speech Workshop, Aix-en-Provence, France, September 10–12; p. n.n. [Google Scholar]
- Zhang, Shiliang. 2015. The Wuhan Dialect: A Hybrid Southwestern Mandarin Variety of Sinitic. Master’s thesis, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China. [Google Scholar]
- Zhang, Yingjia, and Yuanyan Chen. 2015. Xiang Fangyan Shuangfeng-hua Yuyin Chutan [Preliminary Investigation of the Phonetics of the Shuangfeng Xiang Dialect]. Curriculum Research 33: 226–27. [Google Scholar]
- Zhang, Cong, Kathleen Jepson, Georg Lohfink, and Amalia Arvaniti. 2021. Comparing acoustic analyses of speech data collected remotely. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 149: 3910–16. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Zhang, Shengyu, Ping Wang, and Tong Shen. 1988. Hunan Taojiang (Gaoqiao) fangyan tongyin zihui [Homophonous vocabulary in the Hunan Taojiang (Gaoqiao) dialect]. Fangyan 4: 270–86. [Google Scholar]
- Zhou, Qin. 2016. Hunan Anhua yu Lianyuan Jiaojie Weizhi Hanyu Fangyan Yuyin de Dili Yuyanxue Yanjiu [Geographical Linguistics Research about the Sounds of Local Dialect in the Border Areas of Anhua and Lianyuan, Hunan Province]. Master’s thesis, Hunan Normal University, Changsha, China. [Google Scholar]
- Zhou, Zhenhe, and Rujie You. 1988. Fangyan yu Zhongguo Wenhua [Dialects and Chinese Culture]. Taipei: Nantian shuju. [Google Scholar]
Dialect Area | High Front | Mid-Front | Low | Mid-Central | High Back | Back |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
岳阳Yueyang | [i], [y] | 0 | [a] | [ə] | [u] | [ɤ], [o] |
湘阴Xiangyin | [i], [y] | 0 | [a] | [ə] | [u] | [o] |
益阳Yiyang | [i], [y] | 0 | [a] | [ə] | [u] | [o] |
桃江 Taojiang | [i], [y] | [ɛ] | [a] | 0 | [ɯ], [u] | [o], [ɔ] |
宁乡Ningxiang | [i], [y] | [ɛ] | [a], [æ] | [ə] | [u] | [ɔ] |
长沙Changsha | [i], [y] | 0 | [a] | [ɤ] | [u] | [o] |
株洲Zhuzhou | [i], [y] | [e] | [æ], [ɒ] | 0 | [u] | [o] |
湘潭Xiangtan | [i], [y] | [e] | [æ] | 0 | [u] | [o], [ɔ] |
衡阳Hengyang | [i], [y] | [e] | [a] | [ə] | [u] | [o] |
邵阳Shaoyang | [i], [y] | [ɛ] | [a] | 0 | [u] | [o] |
邵东Shaodong | [i], [y] | [ɛ] | [a] | 0 | [ɯ] | [o] |
双峰Shuangfeng | [i], [y] | [e] | [a] | [ə ~ ɤ] | [u] | [o] |
永州Yongzhou | [i], [y] | [e] | [æ], [a] | 0 | [u] | [o], [ɔ] |
城步Chengbu | [i], [y] | [ɛ] | [a] | [ə] | [u] | [o] |
Dialect Area | No. of Speakers | Typo. Affiliation | Chen and Bao (2007) | No. of HMs |
---|---|---|---|---|
岳阳市Yueyang | 3 | Changyi-New | CY | 41 |
湘阴县Xiangyin | 2 | Changyi-New | CY | 21 |
益阳市Yiyang | 5 | Changyi-New | CY | 35 |
桃江县Taojiang | 1 | Changyi-New | CY | 4 |
宁乡市Ningxiang | 2 | Changyi-New | CY | 9 |
长沙市Changsha | 12 | Changyi-New | CY | 92 |
株洲市Zhuzhou | 5 | Changyi-New | CY | 4 |
湘潭市Xiangtan | 2 | Changyi-New | CY | 4 |
衡阳市Hengyang | 4 | Changyi-New | HZ | 21 |
安化县Anhua | 1 | Loushao-Old | LS | 0 |
邵阳市Shaoyang | 4 | Loushao-Old | LS | 31 |
隆回县Longhui | 1 | Loushao-Old | LS | 0 |
邵东县Shaodong | 1 | Loushao-Old | LS | 3 |
双峰县Shuangfeng | 1 | Loushao-Old | LS | 20 |
永州市Yongzhou | 1 | Loushao-Old | YQ | 3 |
城步县Chengbu | 2 | Loushao-Old | LS | 5 |
Area | Quality | No. of Tokens | Average F1 | Average F2 |
---|---|---|---|---|
NE | central | 44 | 667.5 | 1473.8 |
NE | back | 27 | 570.9 | 1213.9 |
NE | low | 23 | 770.0 | 1370.7 |
NE | front | 12 | 551.1 | 1814.8 |
SW | central | 13 | 661.7 | 1551.3 |
SW | back | 2 | 628.6 | 1233.5 |
SW | low | 16 | 816.8 | 1451.9 |
SW | front | 12 | 652.1 | 1933.5 |
TR | central | 25 | 644.2 | 1502.8 |
TR | back | 8 | 567.4 | 1281.4 |
TR | low | 5 | 914.8 | 1319.6 |
TR | front | 10 | 625.9 | 1923.8 |
HT | central | 33 | 641.4 | 1515.7 |
HT | back | 32 | 538.6 | 1239.0 |
HT | low | 13 | 848.0 | 1499.6 |
HT | front | 6 | 651.5 | 1710.0 |
No. of Items | Northeast | Southwest | Transitional | Heritage | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Front | 40 | 0.11 | 0.28 | 0.21 | 0.07 |
Central | 115 | 0.42 | 0.30 | 0.52 | 0.39 |
Back | 69 | 0.25 | 0.05 | 0.17 | 0.38 |
Low | 57 | 0.22 | 0.37 | 0.10 | 0.15 |
Overall | 281 | 0.38 | 0.15 | 0.17 | 0.30 |
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2023 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Sevilla, R.M. Vowel Quality in Xiang Non-Lexical Hesitation Markers: New Forms of Typological Evidence? Languages 2023, 8, 73. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages8010073
Sevilla RM. Vowel Quality in Xiang Non-Lexical Hesitation Markers: New Forms of Typological Evidence? Languages. 2023; 8(1):73. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages8010073
Chicago/Turabian StyleSevilla, Robert Marcelo. 2023. "Vowel Quality in Xiang Non-Lexical Hesitation Markers: New Forms of Typological Evidence?" Languages 8, no. 1: 73. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages8010073
APA StyleSevilla, R. M. (2023). Vowel Quality in Xiang Non-Lexical Hesitation Markers: New Forms of Typological Evidence? Languages, 8(1), 73. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages8010073