The glottal stop between segmental and suprasegmental processing: The case of Maltese

Publication date: October 2019Source: Journal of Memory and Language, Volume 108Author(s): Holger Mitterer, Sahyang Kim, Taehong ChoAbstractMany languages mark vowel-initial words with a glottal stop. We show that this occurs in Maltese, even though the glottal stop also occurs as a phoneme in Maltese. As a consequence, words with and without an underlying (phonemic) glottal stop (e.g., a glottal stop-zero minimal pair qal /Ɂɑ:l/ vs. ghal /ɑ:l/ Engl., ‘he said’-‘because’) can become homophonous in connected speech. We first tested the extent of this phonetic marking of vowel-initial words in a production experiment and found that even in fluent productions, about half of the vowel-initial words are marked with an epenthetic glottal stop. The epenthetic glottal stop is more likely to occur when the preceding word is longer, showing a kind of preboundary lengthening at a phrase-level prosodic boundary. A subsequent perception study (Experiment 2) using a two-alternative forced-choice task with a minimal pair of a glottal stop-initial and a vowel-initial word indicated that listeners are sensitive to the durationally conditioned prosodic context before the test word, and they are more likely to perceive a vowel-initial word when the preceding word is lengthened. An additional eye-tracking study (Experiment 3) using onset-overlap pairs (e.g., qafla /Ɂɑflɑ/ - afda, /ɑfdɑ/ → [Ɂɑfda], Engl., ‘to trust’ - ‘chord’) showed no early influence of prosodic cues...
Source: Journal of Memory and Language - Category: Speech-Language Pathology Source Type: research