Title of article :
Where does loanword prosody come from?: A case study of Japanese loanword accent
Author/Authors :
Haruo Kubozono، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
31
From page :
1140
To page :
1170
Abstract :
In this paper we analyze loanword accentuation in Japanese with main focus on its relation with native accentuation. At first glance, loanwords display remarkably different accent patterns from native words, with the former but not the latter favoring the accented pattern over the unaccented one. We present statistical evidence that this impression cannot empirically be supported. Loanwords differ from native words in several phonological structures, notably in the abundance of heavy syllables and epenthetic vowels. If these differences are properly controlled, the two types of words, whether lexically accented or unaccented, exhibit very similar accent patterns and preferences although loanwords still show a stronger tendency towards the accented pattern than native words. This study provides a significant implication for the phonetics vs. phonology controversy in the loanword literature, too. We will demonstrate that perceptual and phonological factors interact with each other in a very interesting way with the first factor determining the overall pitch shape of loanwords, which is then constrained by the prosodic system of the recipient language to yield an appropriate output form.
Keywords :
Japanese accentuation , Syllable structure , Loanword prosody
Journal title :
Lingua(International Review of General Linguistics)
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Lingua(International Review of General Linguistics)
Record number :
1290461
Link To Document :
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