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The role of the jaw in consonant articulation.
Author(s) -
SunAh Jun,
Sook-hyang Lee,
Mary E. Beckman,
Kenneth De Jong
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
the journal of the acoustical society of america
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.619
H-Index - 187
eISSN - 1520-8524
pISSN - 0001-4966
DOI - 10.1121/1.402104
Subject(s) - articulator , coarticulation , articulation (sociology) , manner of articulation , sonority hierarchy , phonology , place of articulation , vowel , linguistics , consonant , syllabification , phonological rule , psychology , syllable , orthodontics , philosophy , medicine , politics , political science , law
Various linguistic roles have been hypothesized for the jaw. In Browman and Goldstein’s Articulatory Phonology, it is identified as the common articulator among gestures involving the lower lip, tongue tip, and tongue body, and Goldstein has suggested that this may underly the differentiation in Arabic phonology between oral consonants (labials, dentals, velars) and gutturals (uvulars, pharyngeals, glottals). Keating (1983) proposed that consonants are specified for relatively fixed jaw heights (sibilants higher than stops higher than glides), providing the phonetic basis for sonority sequencing constraints. Macchi (1985) proposed that jaw height during consonants reflects both a passive coarticulation with neighboring vowels, and an active suprasegmental specification (lower in stressed syllables). This paper re‐examines these hypotheses using a corpus contrasting different places of articulation. The hypotheses are supported more or less well, depending on place. For example, Macchi’s hypothesis was bor...

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