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The acquisition of newly emerging sociophonetic variation: /str-/ in American English*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 November 2013

BEN RUTTER*
Affiliation:
University of Sheffield

Abstract

Eight children aged 4;1–8;1 and their primary caregivers participated in a study designed to evaluate their use of the onset cluster /str-/ in both read and conversational speech. The cluster is currently undergoing a reported sound change in many varieties of English, with the initial /s/ being retracted to [ʃ]. The study compared the initial fricative of the cluster in both the children and their mothers. Acoustic analysis was carried out in order to categorize tokens as either [s] or [ʃ] using spectral peak analysis. Results found that children as young as 5;1 were starting to exhibit the usage patterns of their mothers. The distribution of the novel variant suggests that the children may be learning this form via a process of lexical diffusion rather than by rule. Implications for the study of dialect acquisition and phonological acquisition in general are discussed.

Type
Brief Research Reports
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2013 

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Footnotes

[*]

Address for correspondence: University of Sheffield, 31 Claremont Crescent, Sheffield, South Yorkshire S102TA, United Kingdom. e-mail: b.rutter@sheffield.ac.uk

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