Martin, Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and perception

Por um escritor misterioso

Descrição

Though Dutch is usually described as lacking a voicing contrast at the velar place of articulation, due to intense language contact and heavy lexical borrowing, a contrast between /k/ and /g/ has recently been emerging. We explored the status of this contrast in Dutch speakers in both production and perception. We asked participants to produce loanwords containing a /g/ in the source language (e.g., goal) and found a range of productions, including a great many unadapted [g] tokens. We also tested the same speakers on their perception of the emerging [k] ~ [g] contrast and found that our participants were able to discriminate the emerging contrast well. We additionally explored the possibility that those speakers who use the new contrast more in production are also better at perceiving it, but we did not observe strong evidence of such a link. Overall, our results indicate that the adoption of the new sound is well advanced in the population we tested, but is still modulated by individual-level factors. We hold that contrasts emerging through borrowing, like other phonological contrasts, are subject to perceptual and functional constraints, and that these and other ‘marginal contrasts’ must be considered as full-fledged parts of phonology.
Martin, Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and perception
On the perceptual origin of loanword adaptations: experimental
Martin, Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and perception
The Phonetics and Phonology of San Martín Itunyoso Trique by
Martin, Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and perception
PDF) Cross-language vowel perception and production by Japanese
Martin, Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and perception
PDF) The production and perception of coronal fricatives in Seoul
Martin, Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and perception
On the relation between speech perception and loanword adaptation
Martin, Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and perception
The vowel inventories of Bukiyip (left) vs. Eastern Mari (right
Martin, Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and perception
Martin Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and
Martin, Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and perception
Supralaryngeal implementation of length and laryngeal contrasts in
Martin, Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and perception
PDF) The Relation Between Perception and Production in L2
Martin, Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and perception
Result of the Mean Difference of Study Variables According to Sex
Martin, Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and perception
Possible production patterns for /ɡ/ by group and language
Martin, Marginal contrast in loanword phonology: Production and perception
Modelling Mandarin speakers' phonotactic knowledge
de por adulto (o preço varia de acordo com o tamanho do grupo)