| Literature DB >> 32460919 |
Nina Gram Garmann1,2, Hanne Gram Simonsen2, Pernille Hansen2, Elisabeth Holm1, Brechtje Post3, Elinor Payne4.
Abstract
Young children simplify word initial consonant clusters by omitting or substituting one (or both) of the elements. Vocalic insertion, coalescence and metathesis are said to be used more seldom (McLeod, van Doorn & Reed, 2001). Data from Norwegian children, however, have shown vocalic insertion to be more frequently used (Simonsen, 1990; Simonsen, Garmann & Kristoffersen, 2019). To investigate the extent to which children use this strategy to differing degrees depending on the ambient language, we analysed word initial cluster production acoustically in nine Norwegian and nine English speaking children aged 2;6-6 years, and eight adults, four from each language. The results showed that Norwegian-speaking children produce significantly more instances of vocalic insertions than English-speaking children do. The same pattern is found in Norwegian- versus English-speaking adults. We argue that this cross-linguistic difference is an example of the influence of prosodic-phonetic biases in language-specific developmental paths in the acquisition of speech.Entities:
Keywords: consonant clusters; epenthesis; prosodic-phonetic biases; vowel insertion; vowel intrusion
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32460919 DOI: 10.1017/S0305000920000069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Lang ISSN: 0305-0009