The dress vowel in New Zealand English (NZE) has been raising
for some time, so that it now overlaps the acoustic space of
fleece for many younger speakers. This article presents an
acoustic analysis of the dress and fleece vowels of 80
speakers and shows that dress continues to raise in contemporary
NZE so that for some speakers dress has risen above
fleece and can be more front than fleece.
fleece has diphthongized as a consequence, making it part of the
New Zealand “short front vowel” shift. This suggests that the
short/long distinction in New Zealand English may have broken down, at
least for the front vowels. The diphthongization of fleece is
most advanced in tokens that are followed by voiceless codas. These are
the tokens that are most endangered by the high dress, as they
are distinguished neither in acoustic space, nor by length.We wish to thank the students who made the
original recordings for the Canterbury Corpus and our research assistants
Deborah Sagee and Toby Macrae for help with digitizing and marking up the
data. An earlier version of this paper was presented at the International
Australian Conference on Speech Science and Technology, December 2004, and
we are grateful to members of the audience for useful suggestions.
Christian Langstrof, Elizabeth Gordon, and an anonymous referee have made
useful comments on an earlier draft, and we are also indebted to Elliott
Moreton, whose suggestions considerably facilitated our ability to make
sense of this data set. This work was partially funded by a grant from the
University of Cantebury (U6286).