| Instrumental Studies in Arabic Phonetics Edited by Zeki Majeed Hassan and Barry Heselwood University of Gothenburg / University of Leeds [Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 319] 2011. xii, 365 pp. Publishing status: Available Hardbound – Available ISBN 978 90 272 4837 4 | EUR 110.00 | USD 165.00 e-Book – Forthcoming Ordering information ISBN 978 90 272 8322 1 | EUR 110.00 | USD 165.00 Brought together in this volume are fourteen studies using a range of modern instrumental methods – acoustic and articulatory – to investigate the phonetics of several North African and Middle Eastern varieties of Arabic. Topics covered include syllable structure, quantity, assimilation, guttural and emphatic consonants and their pharyngeal and laryngeal mechanisms, intonation, and language acquisition. In addition to presenting new data and new descriptions and interpretations, a key aim of the volume is to demonstrate the depth of objective analysis that instrumental methods can enable researchers to achieve. A special feature of many chapters is the use of more than one type of instrumentation to give different perspectives on phonetic properties of Arabic speech which have fascinated scholars since medieval times. The volume will be of interest to phoneticians, phonologists and Arabic dialectologists, and provides a link between traditional qualitative accounts of spoken Arabic and modern quantitative methods of instrumental phonetic analysis.
Acknowledgements vii – viii List of contributors ix – x Transliteration and transcription symbols for Arabic xi – xii Introduction Barry Heselwood and Zeki Majeed Hassan 1 – 26 Part I. Issues in syntagmatic structure Preliminary study of Moroccan Arabic word-initial consonant clusters and syllabification using electromagnetic articulography Adamantios I. Gafos, Philip Hoole and Chakir Zeroual 27 – 46 An acoustic phonetic study of quantity and quantity complementarity in Swedish and Iraqi Arabic Zeki Majeed Hassan 47 – 62 Assimilation of /l/ to /r/ in Syrian Arabic: An electropalatographic and acoustic study Barry Heselwood, Sara Howard and Rawya Ranjous 63 – 98 Part II. Guttural consonants A study of the laryngeal and pharyngeal consonants in Jordanian Arabic using nasoendoscopy, videofluoroscopy and spectrography Barry Heselwood and Feda Al-Tamimi 99 A phonetic study of guttural laryngeals in Palestinian Arabic using laryngoscopic and acoustic analysis Kimary N. Shahin 129 – 140 Airflow and acoustic modelling of pharyngeal and uvular consonants in Moroccan Arabic Mohamed Yeou and Shinji Maeda 141 – 162 Part III. Emphasis and coronal consonants Nasoendoscopic, videofluoroscopic and acoustic study of plain and emphatic coronals in Jordanian Arabic Feda Al-Tamimi and Barry Heselwood 163 – 192 Acoustic and electromagnetic articulographic study of pharyngealisation: Coarticulatory effects as an index of stylistic and regional variation in Arabic Mohamed Embarki, Slim Ouni, Mohamed Yeou, M. Christian Guilleminot and Sallal Al-Maqtari 193 – 216 Investigating the emphatic feature in Iraqi Arabic: Acoustic and articulatory evidence of coarticulation Zeki Majeed Hassan and John H. Esling 217 – 234 Glottalisation and neutralisation in Yemeni Arabic and Mehri: An acoustic study Janet C.E. Watson and Alex Bellem 235 – 256 The phonetics of localising uvularisation in Ammani-Jordanian Arabic: An acoustic study Bushra Adnan Zawaydeh and Kenneth de Jong 257 – 276 EMA, endoscopic, ultrasound and acoustic study of two secondary articulations in Moroccan Arabic: Labial-velarisation vs. emphasis Chakir Zeroual, John H. Esling and Philip Hoole 277 – 298 Part IV. Intonation and acquisition Acoustic cues to focus and givenness in Egyptian Arabic Sam Hellmuth 299 – 324 Acquisition of Lebanese Arabic and Yorkshire English /l/ by bilingual and monolingual children: A comparative spectrographic study Ghada Khattab 325 – 354 Appendix: Phonetic instrumentation used in the studies 355 – 358
|