Louma Oeshi is an Akoid (Tibeto-Burman) language of Laos for which acoustic characteristics are undocumented with the exception of preliminary work by the present authors. This study focuses on the phonetic properties associated with Oeshi's three tones (high, mid, and low) and two registers (Tense, Lax), which fully intersect to yield a six-way suprasegmental contrast. Eight speakers were recorded in Phongsali Province, Lao PDR. Each spoke a 100 token word list, for which 30 tokens were repeated in a carrier sentence placing the token between high and mid-toned lax words. Decile measures of F0 and an array of measures reflecting phonation types (H1-H2, H1-A1, H1-A3, HNR, and SHR) were performed in Voicesauce (Shue et al. 2011) to capture dynamic values over the syllable duration. Our findings show a reliable three-way F0 contrast between tones and a single interaction with register such that High Tense words consistently fall (tones are otherwise level). Acoustic correlates of the Tense~Lax distinction are less clear. The picture that emerges is one where Tense register has variable phonetic manifestations — preglottalization of onsets, vocalic creaky voice, or a glottal stop coda — and the seemingly inconsistent acoustic results reflect these variable articulatory timing strategies.
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