Variation of Oral and Nasal Stops by English and Japanese Learners of Thai

A categorical variability constraint-based analysis (Boersma & Hayes 2001) accounts for oral and nasal stop acquisition in three different positions by English and Japanese learners of Thai. Homorganic nasals take place at the intermediate level where two or more surface forms are selected as op...

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Main Author: Sugunya RUANGJAROON
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Hawaii Press 2020-01-01
Series:Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10524/52463
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spelling doaj-116824fd538840719f0118091444ba7e2020-11-25T02:52:05ZengUniversity of Hawaii PressJournal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society1836-68211836-68212020-01-0113186106Variation of Oral and Nasal Stops by English and Japanese Learners of ThaiSugunya RUANGJAROON0Srinakharinwirot UniversityA categorical variability constraint-based analysis (Boersma & Hayes 2001) accounts for oral and nasal stop acquisition in three different positions by English and Japanese learners of Thai. Homorganic nasals take place at the intermediate level where two or more surface forms are selected as optimal candidates. Both aspirated and voiced stops also occur, avoiding an unaspirated onset in almost equal frequencies. To account for variation of Thai stops, GLA, a stochastic OT approach is adopted for constraint reassessment rather than standard OT. In the initial state of the grammar, markedness constraints outrank faithfulness constraints for beginners. Markedness and faithfulness constraints overlap for intermediate learners exhibiting variation. At the advanced stage, faithfulness constraints were higher ranked because both English and Japanese learners are able to master Thai oral and nasal stops. The analysis proposed in the paper yields more accurate results than a categorical analysis.http://hdl.handle.net/10524/52463gradual learning algorithmsecond language phonological acquisitionfree variationhomorganic nasalsthai oral and nasalstopsthai as a second language
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sugunya RUANGJAROON
spellingShingle Sugunya RUANGJAROON
Variation of Oral and Nasal Stops by English and Japanese Learners of Thai
Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society
gradual learning algorithm
second language phonological acquisition
free variation
homorganic nasals
thai oral and nasalstops
thai as a second language
author_facet Sugunya RUANGJAROON
author_sort Sugunya RUANGJAROON
title Variation of Oral and Nasal Stops by English and Japanese Learners of Thai
title_short Variation of Oral and Nasal Stops by English and Japanese Learners of Thai
title_full Variation of Oral and Nasal Stops by English and Japanese Learners of Thai
title_fullStr Variation of Oral and Nasal Stops by English and Japanese Learners of Thai
title_full_unstemmed Variation of Oral and Nasal Stops by English and Japanese Learners of Thai
title_sort variation of oral and nasal stops by english and japanese learners of thai
publisher University of Hawaii Press
series Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society
issn 1836-6821
1836-6821
publishDate 2020-01-01
description A categorical variability constraint-based analysis (Boersma & Hayes 2001) accounts for oral and nasal stop acquisition in three different positions by English and Japanese learners of Thai. Homorganic nasals take place at the intermediate level where two or more surface forms are selected as optimal candidates. Both aspirated and voiced stops also occur, avoiding an unaspirated onset in almost equal frequencies. To account for variation of Thai stops, GLA, a stochastic OT approach is adopted for constraint reassessment rather than standard OT. In the initial state of the grammar, markedness constraints outrank faithfulness constraints for beginners. Markedness and faithfulness constraints overlap for intermediate learners exhibiting variation. At the advanced stage, faithfulness constraints were higher ranked because both English and Japanese learners are able to master Thai oral and nasal stops. The analysis proposed in the paper yields more accurate results than a categorical analysis.
topic gradual learning algorithm
second language phonological acquisition
free variation
homorganic nasals
thai oral and nasalstops
thai as a second language
url http://hdl.handle.net/10524/52463
work_keys_str_mv AT sugunyaruangjaroon variationoforalandnasalstopsbyenglishandjapaneselearnersofthai
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