SzczepekReed2025

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SzczepekReed2025
BibType ARTICLE
Key SzczepekReed2025
Author(s) Beatrice Szczepek Reed
Title Horse-directed vocalizations: clicks, trills, and /ho:/
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Phonetics, Interactional phonetics, Phonetics of talk-in-interaction
Publisher
Year 2025
Language English
City
Month
Journal Language & Communication
Volume 100
Number
Pages 25-45
URL Link
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.langcom.2024.11.006
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

The study investigates horse-directed vocalizations in English and German. A corpus of human-horse activities contains clicks, trills, and variants of /ho:/. Horse-directed vocalizations show much phonetic and prosodic variation, which makes them adjustable to local interactional contexts. The largest group are clicks (lateral, dental, bilabial), which are used to ask horses to move faster. Trills (bilabial, alveolar) optionally end in alveolar stops. Their duration, intonation, and overall pitch vary considerably. German and English speakers use trills for opposite interactional purposes (slowing down vs. speeding up). /ho:/-type vocalizations vary with regard to first consonants, vowels, final consonants, duration, and intonation. /ho:/-variants are used to calm and/or slow horses down. Unlike non-lexical vocalizations in human talk, horse-directed vocalizations have specific, conventionalized meanings.

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