Home
Catalogue search
Refine your search:
Keyword:
200404 - Laboratory Phonetics and Speech Science (1)
970120 - Expanding Knowledge in Languages (1)
Communication and Culture (1)
English language (1)
French speakers (1)
fricatives (1)
second language acquisition (1)
speech perception (1)
study and teaching (1)
Creator / Publisher:
Calhoun, Sasha (Editor) (1)
Clot, Eléonore (1)
Escudero, Paola (Editor) (1)
International Congress of Phonetic Sciences (Event place) (1)
Pattamadilok, Chotiga (1)
School of Social Sciences and Psychology (Host institution) (1)
Tabain, Marija (Editor) (1)
Tyler, Michael D. (1)
Villain-Bailly, Marie-Sophie (1)
Warren, Paul (Editor) (1)
Year:
2019 (1)
Medium:
Online (1)
Type:
Article (1)
BLLDB-Access:
free (1)
subject to license (0)
Search in the Catalogues and Directories
All fields
Title
Creator / Publisher
Keyword
Year
AND
OR
AND NOT
All fields
Title
Creator / Publisher
Keyword
Year
AND
OR
AND NOT
All fields
Title
Creator / Publisher
Keyword
Year
AND
OR
AND NOT
All fields
Title
Creator / Publisher
Keyword
Year
AND
OR
AND NOT
All fields
Title
Creator / Publisher
Keyword
Year
Sort by
creator [A → Z]
'
creator [Z → A]
'
publishing year ↑ (asc)
'
publishing year ↓ (desc)
'
title [A → Z]
'
title [Z → A]
'
Simple Search
Hits 1 – 1 of 1
1
Perceptual assimilation of English dental fricatives by native speakers of European French
Tyler, Michael D.
(R11374);
Clot, Eléonore
;
Villain-Bailly, Marie-Sophie
;
Pattamadilok, Chotiga
. - : Canberra, A.C.T., Australasian Speech Science and Technology Association, 2019
Abstract:
The phonetic characteristics of French-accented speech suggest that French native speakers often have difficulty producing dental fricatives in English. However, there is a surprising lack of empirical research on perception of those consonants. Canadian French speakers appear to assimilate /θ/ to /t/ and /d/ to /d/, but loanword evidence suggests that European French speakers should assimilate them to /s/ and /z/, respectively. To test this, 151 native European French listeners categorised and rated the goodness-of-fit of English /θ, f, s, t, d, v, z, d/ to French phonological categories. /θ/ was categorised as /f/, whereas /d/ was uncategorised, with responses divided between /v/ and /z/. The remaining consonants were categorised as their corresponding French categories, with /θ/ rated as a poorer French /f/ than /f/. While the majority of individual participants categorised the dental fricatives as /f, v/, there were small subsets of participants who categorised them as /s, z/.
Keyword:
200404 - Laboratory Phonetics and Speech Science
;
970120 - Expanding Knowledge in Languages
;
Communication and Culture
;
English language
;
French speakers
;
fricatives
;
second language acquisition
;
speech perception
;
study and teaching
URL:
https://icphs2019.org/icphs2019-fullpapers/pdf/full-paper_543.pdf
https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:52913
BASE
Hide details
Mobile view
All
Catalogues
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
0
IDS Mannheim
0
OLC Linguistik
0
UB Frankfurt Retrokatalog
0
DNB Subject Category Language
0
Institut für Empirische Sprachwissenschaft
0
Leibniz-Centre General Linguistics (ZAS)
0
Bibliographies
BLLDB
0
BDSL
0
IDS Bibliografie zur deutschen Grammatik
0
IDS Bibliografie zur Gesprächsforschung
0
IDS Konnektoren im Deutschen
0
IDS Präpositionen im Deutschen
0
IDS OBELEX meta
0
MPI-SHH Linguistics Collection
0
MPI for Psycholinguistics
0
Linked Open Data catalogues
Annohub
0
Online resources
Link directory
0
Journal directory
0
Database directory
0
Dictionary directory
0
Open access documents
BASE
1
Linguistik-Repository
0
IDS Publikationsserver
0
Online dissertations
0
Language Description Heritage
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik
|
Imprint
|
Privacy Policy
|
Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern