A fraction too much friction
The phonological status of voiced fricatives
Typological work shows that voiced fricatives like /β ð/ occur more often without their voiceless counterparts than with them, contrary to what would be expected on the basis of markedness relations between voicing and obstruents. This paper suggests that many of the offending fricatives are more appropriately viewed as sonorants, whose unmarked status is to be voiced. This view has an important consequence for the interpretation of intervocalic voicing (e.g. afa > ava), which we suspect is the diachronic origin of most of the fricatives in our corpus. We propose that intervocalic voicing is sonorization, formalized in terms of the suppression of melodic material.
Cited by (2)
Cited by two other publications
Cortiana, Giulia & Yasaman Rafat
2021.
production of L2 Italian voiced palatal lateral and voiced palatal nasal by English-speaking learners.
Journal of Monolingual and Bilingual Speech 3:1
de Kok, Kenneth, Bert Botma & Marijn van ’t Veer
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