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Preaspiration in the Nordic Languages: Synchronic and Diachronic ...

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v s <br />

Figure 4–26. Subj. CK: […rätt]<br />

väster[ut] ‘…due west’<br />

v e s <br />

Figure 4–28. Subj. GT: [syd]västra<br />

[hörnet] ‘…south-western corner’<br />

4.2.6 Word-<strong>in</strong>itial lenis stops<br />

– 139 –<br />

s <br />

Figure 4–27. Subj. FS: västerut<br />

‘westwards’<br />

s <br />

Figure 4–29. Subj. MP: […spikra]kt<br />

västeru[t] ‘…directly to <strong>the</strong> west’<br />

The production of word-<strong>in</strong>itial lenis stops is quite uniform for all<br />

four subjects. First, we consider word-<strong>in</strong>itial, prevocalic lenis stops <strong>in</strong><br />

content words, as <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> words börja ‘beg<strong>in</strong>’ <strong>and</strong> dal ‘valley.’ When such<br />

stops occur utterance-<strong>in</strong>itially, all subjects tend to produce a stop with a<br />

considerable voic<strong>in</strong>g lead. In Figure 4–30, for example, CK produces <strong>the</strong><br />

word deltat ‘<strong>the</strong> delta’ with a voic<strong>in</strong>g lead of approximately 70 ms <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

utterance-<strong>in</strong>itial stop. Figure 4–31 is an example of MP’s production of

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