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Between-word junctures in early multi-word speech

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2002

CAROLINE NEWTON
Affiliation:
Department of Human Communication Science, University College London, UK
BILL WELLS
Affiliation:
Department of Human Communication Sciences, University of Sheffield, UK

Abstract

Most children aged 1;6 to 2;0 begin to use utterances of two words or more. It is therefore important for child phonologists to consider the development of phonetic and phonological phenomena that characterize connected speech. The longitudinal case study reported here investigated three juncture types – assimilation, elision and liaison – in the speech of a typically-developing child between the ages of 2;4 and 3;4. Attempts at production of these adult juncture types occurred from the onset of two-word utterances. However, for some juncture types, the child still had to perfect the intergestural relationships and gestural articulations that the adult between-word junctures demand. This process of phonetic development was largely accomplished by the age of 3;4. With one exception, between-word junctures appear not to be the result of learned phonological rules or processes. The exception is liaison involving /r/, which did not occur until the child was three years old.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2002 Cambridge University Press

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