JOURNAL ARTICLE

Korean speakers hyperarticulate vowels in polite speech*

Abstract

In line with recent attention to the multimodal expression of politeness, the present study examined the association between polite speech and acoustic features through the analysis of vowels produced in casual and polite speech contexts in Korean. Fourteen adult native speakers of Seoul Korean produced the utterances in two social conditions to elicit polite (professor) and casual (friend) speech. Vowel duration and the first (F1) and second formants (F2) of seven sentence- and phrase-initial monophthongs were measured. The results showed that polite speech shares acoustic similarities with vowel production in clear speech: speakers showed greater vowel space expansion in polite than casual speech in an effort to enhance perceptual intelligibility. Especially, female speakers hyperarticulated (front) vowels for polite speech, independent of speech rate. The implications for the acoustic encoding of social stance in polite speech are further discussed.

Keywords:
Politeness Vowel Formant Casual Psychology Linguistics Sentence Intelligibility (philosophy) Speech recognition Vowel length Audiology Computer science Medicine

Metrics

4
Cited By
0.61
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
47
Refs
0.68
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Phonetics and Phonology Research
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Linguistic Variation and Morphology
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Linguistics and Language
Language, Discourse, Communication Strategies
Social Sciences →  Arts and Humanities →  Language and Linguistics

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

Prosodic Characteristics of Japanese Polite Speech Spoken by Native Speakers

Tsurutani, Chiharu

Journal:   Griffith Research Online (Griffith University, Queensland, Australia) Year: 2016
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Training Korean second language speakers on English vowels and prosody

Dong-Jin ShinPaul Iverson

Journal:   Proceedings of meetings on acoustics Year: 2013 Pages: 060048-060048
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Perception of English vowels by native Korean and Japanese speakers

Takeshi NozawaElaina M. Frieda

Journal:   The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Year: 2001 Vol: 110 (5_Supplement)Pages: 2686-2686
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Training Korean second language speakers on English vowels and prosody

Dong-Jin ShinPaul Iverson

Journal:   The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Year: 2013 Vol: 133 (5_Supplement)Pages: 3333-3333
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Acoustic effects of loud speech across vowels and speakers

Laura L. KoenigSusanne Fuchs

Journal:   The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Year: 2015 Vol: 137 (4_Supplement)Pages: 2413-2413
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.