Anti-hiatus tendencies in Spanish: Rate of occurrence and phonetic identification
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/111459Metadatos
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2024Referencia bibliográfica
Herrero de Haro, A. y Alcoholado Feltstrom, A. (2024). Anti-hiatus tendencies in Spanish: Rate of occurrence and phonetic identification. Linguistics 62 (1): 203-228. https://doi.org/10.1515/ling-2021-0228
Resumen
Spanish normative grammar considers any two-vowel combination of /e/, /a/, and /o/ as a hiatus, accepting that they can be pronounced as a diphthong in lower basilects and/or informal registers. This paper analyzes speeches of educated speakers, performing an acoustic analysis of 60 segmental and suprasegmental features in 493 vowel sequences. Linear mixed-effects models suggest that two-vowel sequences of /e/, /a/, and /o/ are pronounced as diphthongs in 77.27% of cases; suprasegmental features (especially duration) are the most reliable cues to distinguish a hiatus from a diphthong in Spanish. These results call for a re-examination of diphthong classification in Spanish.




