"We Pray for Our Nation an(d) Our Worl(d)"

Stella Takvoryan
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Abstract

This paper examines the effect of race, context, and white public space on the extent to which speakers articulate, hyperarticulate, hypo-articulate, or glottalize word-final English alveolar stops -/t/ and -/d/ in the controlled environment of the quadrennial US Presidential Inaugural Prayer. It shows that African-American speakers hyperarticulated and articulated /t,d/ more frequently than the white speaker, who hypo-articulated and glottalized /t,d/ consistently, especially on words like God, Lord, and Christ. These results suggest that the highly formal context required African-American speakers to perform /t,d/ to index themselves as authorities to an unfamiliar, white audience, while the white speaker did not consider race to influence listeners’ judgements of him, allowing him to index familiarity and trustworthiness. 
“我们为我们的国家和世界祈祷”
本文研究了种族、语境和白人公共空间对说话者在四年一次的美国总统就职祈祷的受控环境中发音、高发音、低发音或声门化的英语词尾肺脏停音-/t/和-/d/程度的影响。该研究表明,非裔美国人说话者比白人说话者更频繁地过度发音/t,d/,而白人说话者则持续地对/t,d/进行低发音和声门音化,尤其是在像God, Lord和Christ这样的词上。这些结果表明,高度正式的语境要求非裔美国人说话者在不熟悉的白人听众面前表现出/t,d/来将自己作为权威,而白人说话者并不认为种族会影响听众对他的判断,从而使他能够对熟悉度和可信度进行索引。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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