Background: Vowel lenition and its link with coarticulation have been the subject of extensive debate in the literature. The\r\naims of the present paper are to demonstrate how vowel lenition and coarticulation are linked in Cypriot Greek (henceforth\r\nCG), to determine the nature of vowel lenition, and to illustrate how vowel lenition and coarticulation result from\r\naerodynamic phenomena.\r\nMethodology/Principal Findings: Eight speakers were recorded producing utterances ending in either /i/ or /u/. Acoustic\r\nmeasures such as V1F2 and stop duration were employed to determine whether lenition of the vowels results in\r\ncoarticulation with the preceding consonant. Results show that there is extensive stop-vowel coarticulation in CG and that\r\nstop production is as variable as vowel production, with full vowels never co-occurring with canonical consonants,\r\nindicating the existence of two routes to lenition in CG.\r\nConclusions/Significance: These findings suggest that lenition in the final syllable is a consequence of the supralaryngeal\r\narticulation coupled with a marginal glottal setting.
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