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SECOND LANGUAGE SPEECH PERCEPTION AND PRODUCTION: ACQUISITION OF PHONOLOGICAL CONTRASTS IN JAPANESE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2005

Dennie Hoopingarner
Affiliation:
Michigan State University

Extract

SECOND LANGUAGE SPEECH PERCEPTION AND PRODUCTION: ACQUISITION OF PHONOLOGICAL CONTRASTS IN JAPANESE. Takako Toda. Landam, MD: University Press of America, 2003. Pp. 213. $63.00 cloth.

This volume is an investigation into second language (L2) phonology. The subject of Toda's study is the development of the syllable timing system of Japanese by learners who are native speakers of English. Toda points out that acquiring a L2 phonology involves more than producing the language without an accent. It is also necessary to develop a system of representations and rules that will govern language use. English and Japanese differ in that while English relies on stress to determine syllable weight, Japanese uses time. This study investigates the extent to which learners of Japanese as a L2 have acquired that aspect of the Japanese syllable and makes use of both perception and production tasks. One of the assumptions of this study—an assumption founded on previous studies in L2 phonology—is that perception and production are interrelated, but that they are not mirror images of one another.

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BOOK NOTICES
Copyright
© 2005 Cambridge University Press

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