• 제목/요약/키워드: Australian English vowels

검색결과 2건 처리시간 0.019초

Australian English Sequences of Semivowel /w/+Back Vowel /3:/, c:/ or /a/ Perception by Korean and Japanese Learners of English

  • Park, See-Gyoon
    • 음성과학
    • /
    • 제4권1호
    • /
    • pp.91-112
    • /
    • 1998
  • This paper aimed at examining the influence of L1 (native language) phonology when speakers of L1 perceive L2 (foreign language) sounds. Korean and Japanese learners of English took a perception test of Australian English words 'work', 'walk' and 'wok'. Based on Korean and Japanese phonology, it was predicted that Korean subjects would face more difficulties than Japanese subjects. The results of the experiment substantiated the influence of L1 phonology in L2 learners' L2 sound perception.

  • PDF

영어의 모음체계 연구 (A study of English vowel system)

  • 이재영
    • 대한음성학회지:말소리
    • /
    • 제38호
    • /
    • pp.71-97
    • /
    • 1999
  • In this paper I have surveyed vowel phonemes in a variety of English accents and have proposed the vowel systems of English. The English accents covered in this paper include General American English, Northeastern American English, Western American English, Southern British English, Northern British English, Scottish English, Southern Irish English, Northern Irish English, Australian English, and New Zealand English. The vowel systems proposed here reflect the acoustic information of vowels and phonological aspects of English. This paper offers an Optimality Theory-based analysis of the English vowel systems by appealing to independently motivated constraints. This paper, following Flemming(1995), makes an assumption that the vowel system in question is selected in output as an optimal candidate by a given constraint ranking, the assumption which is different from the view that the vowel system is fixed in input. The analysis proposed here gives an answer to why a specific vowel system is selected and why dialectal variations come about. It is shown in this paper that the vowel system selected in a specific dialect comes from an optimal satisfaction of a given constraint ranking and that dialectal differences result from dynamic permutations of the same constraints. The constraint-based analysis proffered here accounts well for the similarities and differences among dialects in regard to the vowel system.

  • PDF