Chapter 16
Presence of the voiced labiodental fricative segment [v] in Texas Spanish
The objective of this study is to analyze the production of voiced labial consonants from an auditory and acoustic perspective in the Spanish of speakers recorded in The Spanish in Texas Corpus Project (Bullock & Toribio 2013). For example, the phrase la vaca ‘the cow’ might be realized as [la.'va.ka] in El Paso, Texas as opposed to the standard Mexican Spanish pronunciation [la.'βa.ka]. While a similar pronunciation is attested in some specific varieties, such as in New Mexican (Torres Cacoullos & Ferreira 2000) or Paraguayan (Lipski 1994) Spanish, it is otherwise rare in the Spanish speaking world, where the oral voiced labial phoneme /b/ is usually realized as a bilabial approximant [β], as in la vaca, or occlusive [b] consonant, as in cien vacas ‘one hundred cows’ [sjẽm.'ba.kas].
The aim of the current paper is to establish if the Texas Spanish speakers from the corpus (1) produce an auditorily and visually perceptible distinction between [v] and [β]/[b], and (2) make an acoustic distinction between [v] and [β]/[b] that correlates with the perception of different categories. Furthermore, this investigation (3) analyzes the linguistic and social factors that condition the use of [v] versus [β] and [b]. The influence of the English language is a fundamental factor that must be taken into account; on the other hand, the realization of /b/ as the voiced labiodental allophone [v] might be an archaism inherited from Old Spanish and preserved in West Texas dialects.
In pursuing these research aims, 850 tokens from video-recorded interviews with 17 participants were submitted to auditory, visual, and acoustic analysis. The results will inform that there are two perceptible categories, labiodental vs. bilabial, and that these also constitute separate acoustic categories.
Article outline
-
1.Introduction
-
2.Theoretical background and framework
- 2.1Labial consonants in Old Spanish
- 2.2Labiodentalization in modern varieties
- 3.The present study
- 3.1The speech tokens
- 3.2Auditory analysis
- 3.3Acoustic analysis
- 4.Results
- 4.1Auditory analysis
- 4.2Acoustic analysis
- 5.Conclusions
-
References
References (18)
References
Alonso, A. 1967. De la Pronunciación Medieval a la Moderna en Español, vol. I. Madrid: Gredos.
Boersma, P. & Weenink, D. 2012. Praat: Doing phonetics by computer. V. 5.3.23. Amsterdam. [URL]
Bullock, B. E. & Toribio, A. J. 2013. The Spanish in Texas Corpus Project. COERLL, The University of Texas at Austin. [URL]
Carrasco, P., Hualde, J. I., & Simonet, M. 2012. Dialectal Differences in Spanish Voiced Obstruent Allophony: Costa Rican versus Iberian Spanish. Phonetica 2012; 69: 149–179.
Cassano, P. 1972. The Influence of Guarani On The Phonology of the Spanish of Paraguay. Studia Linguistica 26: 106–112.
Gordon, E. 1997. Sex, Speech, And Stereotypes: Why Women Use Prestige Speech Forms More than Men. Language in Society 26: 47–63.
Herman, J. 2000. Vulgar Latin. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press.
Hualde, J. I. 2009. Los Sonidos de la Lengua: Fonética y Fonología. In J. I. Hualde et al. (Eds.), Introducción a la Lingüística Hispánica. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Lipski, J. M. 1994. Latin American Spanish. London: Longman.
Penny, R. J. 2000. Variation and Change in Spanish. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
R Core Team 2013. version 3.0.2 R: A language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. URL [URL].
Romero, L., Guerreiro, Y., & Alviárez, L. 2008. Fricativas y Aproximantes: Labiodentalización y Refuerzo en el Español de Maracaibo. Opción: Revista de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales, ISSN 1012–1587, Nº. 57, 2008, pp. 58–73.
Sadowsky, S. 2010. El Alófono Labiodental Sonoro [v] del Fonema /b/ en el Castellano de Concepción (Chile): Una Investigación Exploratoria. The Voiced Labiodental Allophone [v] of the Phoneme /b/ in the Spanish of Concepción (Chile): An Exploratory Study. Estudios de Fonética Experimental, ISSN 1575–5533, XIX, 2010, pp. 231–261.
Takawaki, S. L. 2012. Orthographic Loyalty in the Spanish of Northern Mexican Speakers. Master’s Thesis, Arizona State University.
Torres Cacoullos, R. & Ferreira, F. 2000. Lexical Frequency and Voiced Labiodental-Bilabial Variation in New Mexican Spanish. Southwest Journal of Linguistics 19(2): 1–17.
Vergara, V. & Pérez, H. E. 2013. Estudio de la Incidencia de la Representación Gráfica (Escritura) en la Producción del Alófono Labiodental [v] del Fonema /b/, Boletín de Filología, Tomo XLVIII Número 2 2013, pp. 119–128.
Ziegler, J. & Ferrand, L. 1998. Orthography Shapes the Perception of Speech: The Consistency Effect in Auditory Word Recognition. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 5 (4): 683–689.
Cited by (2)
Cited by two other publications
Gradoville, Michael, Sofía Fernandez, Avizia Long & Mark Waltermire
2024.
Lectal coherence in a border bilingual community.
Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics 17:1
► pp. 25 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 16 july 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.