Phonetics and Phonology of Heritage Languages (eBook, ePUB)
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Phonetics and Phonology of Heritage Languages (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Rao, Rajiv
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Februar 2024
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781108967952
- Artikelnr.: 70910882
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Introduction Rajiv Rao and Maria Polinsky; 1. Front rounded vowels of
Heritage Korean in Northern China Yoonjung Kang, Sungwoo Han, Na-Young Ryu,
Jessamyn Scherts, and Suyeon Yun; 2. Phonetic Influence from the minority
language: the case of American English heritage speakers in Israel Kyle S.
Jones; 3. Phonological transfer in Heritage Japanese in Australia: L1 and
L2 comparisons, and literacy and community contributions Kaya Oriyama; 4.
Phrasal prosody of heritage speakers of Samoan in Aotearoa New Zealand
Sasha Calhoun, Corinne Seals, Toaga Christina Alefosio, and Niusila
Faamanatu-Eteuati; 5. Stress placement in English loanwords by speakers of
Mirpur Pahari in the UK Sehrish Shafi and Sam Hellmuth; 6.
Intergenerational transmission of laterals in Punjabi-English heritage
bilinguals Sam Kirkham and Maya Zara; 7. Perception and production of
phonemic contrasts in Heritage Russian and Polish in Germany Bernhard
Brehmer, Tatjana Kurbangulova, Dominika Steinbach, and Vladimir Arifulin;
8. Focus realization in Heritage Spanish: the case of German-Dominant
speakers of Peninsular Spanish Ingo Feldhausen and Maria del Mar Vanrell;
9. Language-Specific phonology of heritage perception: the case of Korean
intervocalic stops Seung-Eun Chang; 10. An individual-differences
perspective on variation in Heritage Mandarin speakers Charles B. Chang and
Yao Yao; 11. Childhood language exposure: does early experience with Arabic
affect sound perception and production in speakers with early interrupted
exposure? Rawan Hanini, Laura Spinu, Yasaman Rafat, and Anwar Alkhudidi;
12. The intonation of declaratives and polar questions in modern versus
Heritage Icelandic Nicole Dehé and Meike Rommel; 13. Functional load and
vowel merger in Toronto Heritage Cantonese Holman Tse; 14. Have Cantonese
tones merged in spontaneous speech? Naomi Nagy, Holman Tse, and James N.
Stanford; 15. Phonetics of stop voicing in heritage and Homeland Polish
Naomi Nagy, Paulina ¿yskawa, Emily Moran, and Mateusz Urban; 16. Perception
and production of English and Portuguese voiceless stops by heritage
learners Anabela Rato and Vanina Machado; 17. Prosodically - Conditioned
variation: Rhotics in Brazilian Veneto Natália Brambatti Guzzo.
Heritage Korean in Northern China Yoonjung Kang, Sungwoo Han, Na-Young Ryu,
Jessamyn Scherts, and Suyeon Yun; 2. Phonetic Influence from the minority
language: the case of American English heritage speakers in Israel Kyle S.
Jones; 3. Phonological transfer in Heritage Japanese in Australia: L1 and
L2 comparisons, and literacy and community contributions Kaya Oriyama; 4.
Phrasal prosody of heritage speakers of Samoan in Aotearoa New Zealand
Sasha Calhoun, Corinne Seals, Toaga Christina Alefosio, and Niusila
Faamanatu-Eteuati; 5. Stress placement in English loanwords by speakers of
Mirpur Pahari in the UK Sehrish Shafi and Sam Hellmuth; 6.
Intergenerational transmission of laterals in Punjabi-English heritage
bilinguals Sam Kirkham and Maya Zara; 7. Perception and production of
phonemic contrasts in Heritage Russian and Polish in Germany Bernhard
Brehmer, Tatjana Kurbangulova, Dominika Steinbach, and Vladimir Arifulin;
8. Focus realization in Heritage Spanish: the case of German-Dominant
speakers of Peninsular Spanish Ingo Feldhausen and Maria del Mar Vanrell;
9. Language-Specific phonology of heritage perception: the case of Korean
intervocalic stops Seung-Eun Chang; 10. An individual-differences
perspective on variation in Heritage Mandarin speakers Charles B. Chang and
Yao Yao; 11. Childhood language exposure: does early experience with Arabic
affect sound perception and production in speakers with early interrupted
exposure? Rawan Hanini, Laura Spinu, Yasaman Rafat, and Anwar Alkhudidi;
12. The intonation of declaratives and polar questions in modern versus
Heritage Icelandic Nicole Dehé and Meike Rommel; 13. Functional load and
vowel merger in Toronto Heritage Cantonese Holman Tse; 14. Have Cantonese
tones merged in spontaneous speech? Naomi Nagy, Holman Tse, and James N.
Stanford; 15. Phonetics of stop voicing in heritage and Homeland Polish
Naomi Nagy, Paulina ¿yskawa, Emily Moran, and Mateusz Urban; 16. Perception
and production of English and Portuguese voiceless stops by heritage
learners Anabela Rato and Vanina Machado; 17. Prosodically - Conditioned
variation: Rhotics in Brazilian Veneto Natália Brambatti Guzzo.
Introduction Rajiv Rao and Maria Polinsky; 1. Front rounded vowels of
Heritage Korean in Northern China Yoonjung Kang, Sungwoo Han, Na-Young Ryu,
Jessamyn Scherts, and Suyeon Yun; 2. Phonetic Influence from the minority
language: the case of American English heritage speakers in Israel Kyle S.
Jones; 3. Phonological transfer in Heritage Japanese in Australia: L1 and
L2 comparisons, and literacy and community contributions Kaya Oriyama; 4.
Phrasal prosody of heritage speakers of Samoan in Aotearoa New Zealand
Sasha Calhoun, Corinne Seals, Toaga Christina Alefosio, and Niusila
Faamanatu-Eteuati; 5. Stress placement in English loanwords by speakers of
Mirpur Pahari in the UK Sehrish Shafi and Sam Hellmuth; 6.
Intergenerational transmission of laterals in Punjabi-English heritage
bilinguals Sam Kirkham and Maya Zara; 7. Perception and production of
phonemic contrasts in Heritage Russian and Polish in Germany Bernhard
Brehmer, Tatjana Kurbangulova, Dominika Steinbach, and Vladimir Arifulin;
8. Focus realization in Heritage Spanish: the case of German-Dominant
speakers of Peninsular Spanish Ingo Feldhausen and Maria del Mar Vanrell;
9. Language-Specific phonology of heritage perception: the case of Korean
intervocalic stops Seung-Eun Chang; 10. An individual-differences
perspective on variation in Heritage Mandarin speakers Charles B. Chang and
Yao Yao; 11. Childhood language exposure: does early experience with Arabic
affect sound perception and production in speakers with early interrupted
exposure? Rawan Hanini, Laura Spinu, Yasaman Rafat, and Anwar Alkhudidi;
12. The intonation of declaratives and polar questions in modern versus
Heritage Icelandic Nicole Dehé and Meike Rommel; 13. Functional load and
vowel merger in Toronto Heritage Cantonese Holman Tse; 14. Have Cantonese
tones merged in spontaneous speech? Naomi Nagy, Holman Tse, and James N.
Stanford; 15. Phonetics of stop voicing in heritage and Homeland Polish
Naomi Nagy, Paulina ¿yskawa, Emily Moran, and Mateusz Urban; 16. Perception
and production of English and Portuguese voiceless stops by heritage
learners Anabela Rato and Vanina Machado; 17. Prosodically - Conditioned
variation: Rhotics in Brazilian Veneto Natália Brambatti Guzzo.
Heritage Korean in Northern China Yoonjung Kang, Sungwoo Han, Na-Young Ryu,
Jessamyn Scherts, and Suyeon Yun; 2. Phonetic Influence from the minority
language: the case of American English heritage speakers in Israel Kyle S.
Jones; 3. Phonological transfer in Heritage Japanese in Australia: L1 and
L2 comparisons, and literacy and community contributions Kaya Oriyama; 4.
Phrasal prosody of heritage speakers of Samoan in Aotearoa New Zealand
Sasha Calhoun, Corinne Seals, Toaga Christina Alefosio, and Niusila
Faamanatu-Eteuati; 5. Stress placement in English loanwords by speakers of
Mirpur Pahari in the UK Sehrish Shafi and Sam Hellmuth; 6.
Intergenerational transmission of laterals in Punjabi-English heritage
bilinguals Sam Kirkham and Maya Zara; 7. Perception and production of
phonemic contrasts in Heritage Russian and Polish in Germany Bernhard
Brehmer, Tatjana Kurbangulova, Dominika Steinbach, and Vladimir Arifulin;
8. Focus realization in Heritage Spanish: the case of German-Dominant
speakers of Peninsular Spanish Ingo Feldhausen and Maria del Mar Vanrell;
9. Language-Specific phonology of heritage perception: the case of Korean
intervocalic stops Seung-Eun Chang; 10. An individual-differences
perspective on variation in Heritage Mandarin speakers Charles B. Chang and
Yao Yao; 11. Childhood language exposure: does early experience with Arabic
affect sound perception and production in speakers with early interrupted
exposure? Rawan Hanini, Laura Spinu, Yasaman Rafat, and Anwar Alkhudidi;
12. The intonation of declaratives and polar questions in modern versus
Heritage Icelandic Nicole Dehé and Meike Rommel; 13. Functional load and
vowel merger in Toronto Heritage Cantonese Holman Tse; 14. Have Cantonese
tones merged in spontaneous speech? Naomi Nagy, Holman Tse, and James N.
Stanford; 15. Phonetics of stop voicing in heritage and Homeland Polish
Naomi Nagy, Paulina ¿yskawa, Emily Moran, and Mateusz Urban; 16. Perception
and production of English and Portuguese voiceless stops by heritage
learners Anabela Rato and Vanina Machado; 17. Prosodically - Conditioned
variation: Rhotics in Brazilian Veneto Natália Brambatti Guzzo.