2020
DOI: 10.1017/s0954394520000034
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td-deletion in British English: New evidence for the long-lost morphological effect

Abstract: ABSTRACTThis paper analyzes td-deletion, the process whereby coronal stops /t, d/ are deleted after a consonant at the end of the word (e.g., best, kept, missed) in the speech of 93 speakers from Manchester, stratified for age, social class, gender, and ethnicity. Prior studies of British English have not found the morphological effect—more deletion in monomorphemic mist than past tense missed… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
(74 reference statements)
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“…Firstly, the model included the maximal random effects structure. Secondly, the random effects structure was iteratively simplified until the model converged (Baranowski and Turton 2020;Bates Douglas et al 2015). The example below shows the R code for the Mold Welsh model containing the maximal random effects structure: VARIANT~HOME LANGUAGE (HL) + TASK + STRESS + GENDER + CONTEXT + SYLLABLES + HL:TASK + HL:GENDER + GENDER:TASK + CONTEXT:STRESS + (1 + TASK + CONTEXT + STRESS + CONTEXT:STRESS|SPEAKER) + (1|WORD)…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Firstly, the model included the maximal random effects structure. Secondly, the random effects structure was iteratively simplified until the model converged (Baranowski and Turton 2020;Bates Douglas et al 2015). The example below shows the R code for the Mold Welsh model containing the maximal random effects structure: VARIANT~HOME LANGUAGE (HL) + TASK + STRESS + GENDER + CONTEXT + SYLLABLES + HL:TASK + HL:GENDER + GENDER:TASK + CONTEXT:STRESS + (1 + TASK + CONTEXT + STRESS + CONTEXT:STRESS|SPEAKER) + (1|WORD)…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Guy (1991b, p. 2) also focuses on word-final /t, d/ deletion in American English and gives a more detailed conclusion: "underived or monomorphemic words such as mist, pact, undergo deletion at a higher rate than inflected forms such as past tense verbs like missed, packed" (see also Labov et al, 1968;Fasold, 1972;Guy, 1991a). Baranowski and Turton (2020) report a result similar to Guy (1991b) for word-final /t, d/ deletion in British English.…”
Section: Exceptions Vs Non-exceptionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Blevins and Lynch (2009, p. 111) claim that the sound change discussed in Crowley (1997) applies to all word classes including verbs, but "phonological and morphological aspects of verbal inflectional paradigms" restore the change in verbs later and give rise to "the apparent exceptionality." Renwick et al (2014) also focus on word-final /t, d/ deletion in British English as Guy (1991b) and Baranowski and Turton (2020), but they (2014) claim that their results show little support for the role of any specific morphological condition.…”
Section: Disputes Over Morphological Conditionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…3 Despite the robustness of this effect in varieties of American English, it has been claimed to be absent in British English (see Tagliamonte & Temple 2005, Temple 2009 on York English). There is recent evidence to suggest that this effect is present in Manchester English, but that it plays a much smaller role compared to the variation in American English and as such is only detectable in largescale corpora (Baranowski & Turton 2020). 4 Alternatively, the intermediate deletion rates in semi-weak items could reflect inter-speaker variation with respect to their representation: Guy & Boyd (1990) argue that age-grading within this class of items suggests that younger speakers are less likely to parse the /t/ of kept as a separate morph.…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%