LENITION IN TAIWANESE SOUTHERN MIN
AT THE SYNTAX-PHONOLOGY INTERFACE
Feng-fan Hsieh
Abstract
This paper examines the phonetics and phonology of lenition in Taiwanese Southern Min, focusing on intervocalic voicing as a crucial manifestation. To systematically explore the phonetic realizations of intervocalic voicing, recognized widely as a typical instantiation of lenition, an electroglottography (EGG) study was conducted. This study manipulated (i) morphosyntactic junctures (word-internal, phrase-internal, and cross-phrasal), (ii) places of articulation (labial, coronal, and dorsal), and (iii) speaking rates (slow and fast) to derive insights into the phenomenon in question. Our findings reveal a robust lexical-functional asymmetry: Intervocalic voicing predominantly occurs in functional elements while being systematically suppressed in lexical words. In comparison, other factors, such as junctures and speaking rates, have a relatively insignificant influence on intervocalic voicing, which contradicts the previous impressionistic results that indicated otherwise. The disparity between lexical and functional elements is attributable to the less stringent faithfulness requirements on functional elements. To elaborate, within a stress-driven analysis of lenition, the unstressed status of functional elements compared to lexical words may contribute to increased gestural overlap between adjacent vowels. This overlap, in turn, could facilitate the exclusive emergence of intervocalic voicing in functional elements.