Asymmetries in phonological development: the case of word-final cluster acquisition in Welsh-English bilingual children
This study provides the first systematic account of word-final cluster acquisition in bilingual children. To this end, 40 Welsh-English bilingual children differing in language dominance and age (2;6 to 5;0) participated in a picture-naming task in English and Welsh. The results revealed significant age and dominance effects on cluster acquisition, with greater overall accuracy on the English clusters. Interestingly, although the Welsh-dominant children outperformed the English-dominant ones on the Welsh clusters, they did not exhibit a concomitant lag on the English clusters. It is argued that this asymmetry is a direct reflection of the sociolinguistic situation in Wales with English as the majority language and Welsh the minority language. The study also revealed accelerated rates of acquisition for English clusters compared with age-matched monolinguals reported elsewhere (Templin, 1957), thereby supporting claims that bilingual contexts may have a facilitative effect on phonological acquisition (Goldstein & Bunta, 2012; Grech & Dodd, 2008).
History
Published in
Journal of Child LanguagePublisher
Cambridge University PressVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Citation
Mayr, R., Howells, G. and Lewis, R. (2015) 'Asymmetries in phonological development: the case of word-final cluster acquisition in Welsh–English bilingual children', Journal of Child Language, 42 (1), pp. 146-179Print ISSN
0305-0009Cardiff Met Affiliation
- Cardiff School of Sport and Health Sciences
Cardiff Met Authors
Robert MayrCardiff Met Research Centre/Group
- Speech, Hearing and Communication
Copyright Holder
- © The Publisher
Language
- en