Item ID |
WIU1-Event0013
|
Title |
Dog vs Knife Minimal Pair |
Description |
Elicitation of Dog vs Knife Minimal Pair. We had initially identified this as a minimal pair, postulating that there is a difference in vowel length. After statistically analysing the tokens, it was discovered that there was no difference either in vowel length or pitch. Caroline asked Susan if she could tell the difference between the recorded tokens of knife and the recorded tokens of dog, and she responded that they all sounded like 'dog'. Susan subsequently elicited the pair from her husband, Tom, who makes a clear distinction. |
Origination date |
2017-03-15 |
Origination date free form |
|
Archive link |
https://catalog.paradisec.org.au/repository/WIU1/Event0013 |
URL |
|
Collector |
Don Daniels
|
Countries |
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Language as given |
Wiru |
Subject language(s) |
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|
Content language(s) |
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|
Dialect |
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Region / village |
Oceania |
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Originating university |
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Operator |
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Data Categories |
language description
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Data Types |
Sound
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Discourse type |
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Roles |
Susan Yakip : researcher
Susan Yakip : speaker
Thompson Mange : speaker
|
DOI |
10.26278/GVRV-QE06 |
Cite as |
Don Daniels (collector), Susan Yakip (researcher, speaker), Thompson Mange (speaker), 2017. Dog vs Knife Minimal Pair. MPEG/VND.WAV. WIU1-Event0013 at catalog.paradisec.org.au. https://dx.doi.org/10.26278/GVRV-QE06 |