The Treatment of Final Coda Consonants in the Acquisition of Romanian Phonology

Final consonant deletion has been attested in the acquisition of English (Johnson–Reimers 2010), Chinese (Hua 2002), Dutch (Fikkert 1994), Hebrew (Adi-Bensaid 2015), Spanish (Goldstein–Citron 2001), and Indonesian (Ulaimah et al. 2016). Previous studies on the acquisition of Romanian phonology (Buja...

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Main Author: Buja Elena
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-11-01
Series:Acta Universitatis Sapientiae: Philologica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/ausp-2020-0027
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spelling doaj-2e33aad4cb2c4b3da25aeb9ea871f0042021-09-06T19:41:27ZengSciendoActa Universitatis Sapientiae: Philologica2391-81792020-11-0112312013710.2478/ausp-2020-0027The Treatment of Final Coda Consonants in the Acquisition of Romanian PhonologyBuja Elena0Department of Theoretical and Applied Linguistics, Transilvania University of BraşovFinal consonant deletion has been attested in the acquisition of English (Johnson–Reimers 2010), Chinese (Hua 2002), Dutch (Fikkert 1994), Hebrew (Adi-Bensaid 2015), Spanish (Goldstein–Citron 2001), and Indonesian (Ulaimah et al. 2016). Previous studies on the acquisition of Romanian phonology (Buja 2015a, b) indicated an extremely low incidence of this phenomenon among the Romanian-speaking children. A possible explanation for it could be the inconsistency in collecting the data (child diaries and longitudinal corpora). By means of an experimental study, i.e. a picture-naming task, this paper aims to prove whether Romanian children do drop final coda consonants. The words describing the pictures presented to the children have a C1(-2)VC1 structure (e.g. drum ‘road, way’, cap ‘head’, nas ‘nose’). The subjects in this small-scale research study were nine monolingual Romanian children aged between 2 and 4 years, who were recorded by their parents. Their spontaneous or imitated productions of the target words were transcribed by using IPA.https://doi.org/10.2478/ausp-2020-0027phonological acquisitionphonological processesfinal coda deletionromanian language
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Buja Elena
spellingShingle Buja Elena
The Treatment of Final Coda Consonants in the Acquisition of Romanian Phonology
Acta Universitatis Sapientiae: Philologica
phonological acquisition
phonological processes
final coda deletion
romanian language
author_facet Buja Elena
author_sort Buja Elena
title The Treatment of Final Coda Consonants in the Acquisition of Romanian Phonology
title_short The Treatment of Final Coda Consonants in the Acquisition of Romanian Phonology
title_full The Treatment of Final Coda Consonants in the Acquisition of Romanian Phonology
title_fullStr The Treatment of Final Coda Consonants in the Acquisition of Romanian Phonology
title_full_unstemmed The Treatment of Final Coda Consonants in the Acquisition of Romanian Phonology
title_sort treatment of final coda consonants in the acquisition of romanian phonology
publisher Sciendo
series Acta Universitatis Sapientiae: Philologica
issn 2391-8179
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Final consonant deletion has been attested in the acquisition of English (Johnson–Reimers 2010), Chinese (Hua 2002), Dutch (Fikkert 1994), Hebrew (Adi-Bensaid 2015), Spanish (Goldstein–Citron 2001), and Indonesian (Ulaimah et al. 2016). Previous studies on the acquisition of Romanian phonology (Buja 2015a, b) indicated an extremely low incidence of this phenomenon among the Romanian-speaking children. A possible explanation for it could be the inconsistency in collecting the data (child diaries and longitudinal corpora). By means of an experimental study, i.e. a picture-naming task, this paper aims to prove whether Romanian children do drop final coda consonants. The words describing the pictures presented to the children have a C1(-2)VC1 structure (e.g. drum ‘road, way’, cap ‘head’, nas ‘nose’). The subjects in this small-scale research study were nine monolingual Romanian children aged between 2 and 4 years, who were recorded by their parents. Their spontaneous or imitated productions of the target words were transcribed by using IPA.
topic phonological acquisition
phonological processes
final coda deletion
romanian language
url https://doi.org/10.2478/ausp-2020-0027
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