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VOWELS IN STANDARD AUSTRIAN GERMAN - Acoustics ...

VOWELS IN STANDARD AUSTRIAN GERMAN - Acoustics ...

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Sylvia Moosmüller<br />

8. Summary and Outlook<br />

Approximately 11.000 vowels of six speakers of Standard Austrian German were<br />

analysed in two speaking tasks (reading sentences and spontaneous speech). Two<br />

speakers additionally read a list of logatomes. The vowels have been segmented<br />

manually, and F1, F2, F3, F0, and duration (in number of periods) have been calculated<br />

and submitted to statistical analysis. Each speaker has been discussed separately.<br />

The acoustic analysis proved that the vowels of Standard Austrian German are<br />

located at five constriction locations: pre-palatal, palatal, velar, upper pharyngeal, and<br />

lower pharyngeal. Except for the pharyngeal vowel, each location is further<br />

distinguished by two degrees of constriction. The pre-palatal and the palatal vowels are<br />

further distinguished by lip protrusion, building a vowel system of thirteen vowels. The<br />

vowels are distinguished by the following features: [±constricted], [±open], [±round],<br />

[±front], [±lower pharyngeal], [±velar], and [±pre-palatal]. The feature [±open] was<br />

added because speaker-specific differences occurred in weak prosodic positions. Some<br />

speakers discerned the vowels by degree of openness, others by degree of constriction.<br />

Duration did not prove to be discriminatory. The feature [±tense] was abandoned in<br />

order to avoid misleading semantic implications which have no articulatory basis.<br />

Tendencies towards neutralization could be observed for the vowel pairs /i/-/ç/, /y/-/Y/,<br />

and /u/-/ï/. One speaker also neutralized the opposition /e/-/E/ in the unstressed<br />

positions of spontaneous speech. The results on F0 did not corroborate the frequently<br />

observed correlation of tongue height and F0. The same holds for the correlation of<br />

tongue height and duration.<br />

It is especially those tendencies towards neutralisation that should be taken note of<br />

in further investigations on the vowels of Standard Austrian German. Standard Austrian<br />

German stands in strong interaction with the Middle-Bavarian dialects, which do not<br />

244

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