Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
936232 | Lingua | 2008 | 18 Pages |
Abstract
Strengthening of underlying schwas to full vowels is a salient characteristic of early child productions. In this paper the development of schwa in longitudinal Dutch child language data is discussed. I explore the possibility that schwa-strengthening is motivated by utterance-final lengthening, which in Dutch leads to a transfer of length from an utterance-final schwa to the vowel preceding schwa. Language learners will replace an utterance-final schwa with a full vowel as long as they lack control over this length-transferring process.
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