Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
A parameter-setting model for second-language phonological acquisition?
-
Allan James
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- I-VIII I
- Introduction 1
-
I Second-language speech: processes and strategies
- English vowel production by Dutch talkers: more evidence for the “similar” vs “new” distinction 11
- Perception and production of a new vowel category by adult second language learners 53
- Interrelation of perceptual and productive learning in the initial acquisition of second-language tone 75
- Effect of word familiarity on non-native phoneme perception: identification of English /r/, /l/ and /w/ by native speakers of Japanese 103
- Perceptual foreign accent: L2 users’ comprehension ability 119
- Native speaker reactions to non-native speech 133
-
II Second-language speech: conditions and constraints
- L2 acquisition, L1 loss, and the critical period hypothesis 147
- Conditions on transfer in phonology 161
- On the non-acquisition of an English sound pattern 181
- Interlanguage and postlexical transfer 187
- On the acquisition of tonal and accentual features of English by Austrian learners 211
- Austrian learners’ development of phonological representations for English 229
-
III Second-language speech: structure and system
- Phonological processes vs morphonological rules in L1 and L2 acquisition 243
- The device “phonological rule” and the acquisition of (inter)phonology 255
- Minimal segments in second language phonology 263
- A parameter-setting model for second-language phonological acquisition? 313
- Towards a typology of bilingual phonological systems 325
- List of contributors 343
- Index 345
Chapters in this book
- I-VIII I
- Introduction 1
-
I Second-language speech: processes and strategies
- English vowel production by Dutch talkers: more evidence for the “similar” vs “new” distinction 11
- Perception and production of a new vowel category by adult second language learners 53
- Interrelation of perceptual and productive learning in the initial acquisition of second-language tone 75
- Effect of word familiarity on non-native phoneme perception: identification of English /r/, /l/ and /w/ by native speakers of Japanese 103
- Perceptual foreign accent: L2 users’ comprehension ability 119
- Native speaker reactions to non-native speech 133
-
II Second-language speech: conditions and constraints
- L2 acquisition, L1 loss, and the critical period hypothesis 147
- Conditions on transfer in phonology 161
- On the non-acquisition of an English sound pattern 181
- Interlanguage and postlexical transfer 187
- On the acquisition of tonal and accentual features of English by Austrian learners 211
- Austrian learners’ development of phonological representations for English 229
-
III Second-language speech: structure and system
- Phonological processes vs morphonological rules in L1 and L2 acquisition 243
- The device “phonological rule” and the acquisition of (inter)phonology 255
- Minimal segments in second language phonology 263
- A parameter-setting model for second-language phonological acquisition? 313
- Towards a typology of bilingual phonological systems 325
- List of contributors 343
- Index 345