Distinctive features and laryngeal control.

Number 113
Year 1971
Drawer 2
Entry Date 06/11/1998
Authors Lisker, L., & Abramson, A. S.
Contact
Publication Language, 47, 767-785.
url http://www.haskins.yale.edu/Reprints/HL0113.pdf
Abstract Physiological, acoustic, and perceptual data indicate that the timing of events at the glottis relative to articulation differentiates homorganic stops in many languages. Such categories are variously described in terms of voicing, aspiration, and force of articulation. Chomsky & Halle 1968 have proposed a universal set of phonetic features, four of which-voice, tensity, glottal constriction, and heightened subglottal pressure-allegedly operate to control the onset timing of laryngeal pulsing. But the observational basis for their analysis is flimsy, and Chomsky and Halle have no substanstive argument for rejecting the possibility of temporal control of laryngeal function.
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