Production Accuracy of L2 Vowels: Phonological Parsimony and Phonetic Flexibility
Production Accuracy of L2 Vowels: Phonological Parsimony and Phonetic Flexibility
Author(s): Šárka Šimáčková, Václav Jonáš PodlipskýSubject(s): Foreign languages learning, Phonetics / Phonology, Language acquisition
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego
Keywords: English as a foreign language; L2 phonology; ultimate attainment; vowels;
Summary/Abstract: Ultimate attainment in foreign-language sound learning is addressed via vowel production accuracy in English spoken by advanced Czech EFL learners. English FLEECE–KIT, DRESS–TRAP, and GOOSE–FOOT contrasts are examined in terms of length, height, and backness. Our data show that, while being constrained by phonemic category assimilation (new vowel height distinctions are not created), the learners’ interlanguage combines phonological parsimony (reusing L1 length feature to contrast L2 vowels) with phonetic flexibility (within-category shifts reflecting L1–L2 phonetic dissimilarity). Although achieving nativelike phonological competence may not be possible learners who acquire L2 in the prevailingly L1 environment, the Czech learners’ implementations of English vowels revealed their ability to adjust for phonetic detail of L2 sounds.
Journal: Research in Language (RiL)
- Issue Year: 16/2018
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 169-191
- Page Count: 23
- Language: English