Cameroon

On Medumba bilabial trills and vowels

Issue Date:
2015
Extent:
4 pages
Abstract:
The Medumba consonant inventory includes plain and prenasalized bilabial trills /ʙ, mʙ/, which contrast with bilabial stops. The trills occur most often before the central vowels /ʉ̜ ə/, while they are not attested before /u/. The central vowel /ʉ̜/ has a vowel posture that is particularly conducive to trilling of the lips: it does not form a circular opening, the corners of the mouth are drawn slightly apart, the lips are tensed, particularly at the corners of the mouth, and there is a narrow aperture between the lips. This suggests that it is close lip aperture of the following vowel—rather than rounding—that provides the most conducive environment for bilabial trill production.
Publication Status:
Published
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Part Of:
The Scottish Consortium for ICPhS 2015, eds., Proceedings of the 18th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences. Glasgow: University of Glasgow. 9780852619414
Part of Series:
Proceedings of the 18th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences
Entry Number:
96870