Loss of unreleased final stops among Mandarin-Min bilinguals: Structural convergence of languages in contact
- Authors
- Weng, Wei-Cheng; Lee-Kim, Sang-Im
- Issue Date
- Nov-2023
- Publisher
- Academic Press
- Keywords
- Bilingualism; Language contact; Sound change; Stop place contrasts; Structural convergence; Taiwanese Southern Min; Unreleased final stops
- Citation
- Journal of Phonetics, v.101, pp 1 - 18
- Pages
- 18
- Indexed
- SSCI
AHCI
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Journal of Phonetics
- Volume
- 101
- Start Page
- 1
- End Page
- 18
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/203999
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.wocn.2023.101279
- ISSN
- 0095-4470
1095-8576
- Abstract
- The two languages of a bilingual speaker are interconnected and mutually influence linguistic forms and structures. This study presents a case in which two languages in contact exhibit phonotactic asymmetries but converge on abstract phonological units by bilingual speakers. The specific case examined here concerns the change-in-progress of unreleased final stops among young Mandarin-Min bilingual speakers in Taiwan. Phonotactically, obstruent finals are illegal in Taiwan Mandarin, whereas Taiwanese Southern Min (TSM), a local substratum language, allows obligatorily unreleased final stops. In the discrimination of stimuli modeled after TSM, bilingual listeners were consistently outperformed by Korean listeners, a non-native reference group without restrictions against obstruent finals. A follow-up production study revealed that final stops produced by the bilingual speakers were prone to deletion accompanied by vowel lengthening, similar to a long vowel in an open syllable, as well as frequent substitution. Furthermore, strong correlations were found between bilingual speakers’ perception and production accuracy, indicating a bidirectional co-evolution between perception and production during language development. Taken together, the results suggest that a loss of unreleased final stops is underway in TSM through the structural convergence of two interacting phonological systems within bilingual individuals.
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