Phonological development: acquisition of hausa secondary consonants by the hausa children / Sani Dauda Ibrahim

Phonological development refers to the stages that children pass before they can correctly use and understand the sound system of their language. Inspired by Stampe’s (1969) Natural Phonology Theory, this paper examines the acquisition of Hausa secondary consonants pronunciation by the Hausa chil...

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Main Author: Ibrahim, Sani Dauda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Teknologi MARA, Kedah 2019
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Online Access:http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/30671/1/AJ_SANI%20DAUDA%20IBRAHIM%20CPLT%20K%2019.pdf
http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/30671/
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Institution: Universiti Teknologi Mara
Language: English
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spelling my.uitm.ir.306712021-01-14T17:51:52Z http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/30671/ Phonological development: acquisition of hausa secondary consonants by the hausa children / Sani Dauda Ibrahim Ibrahim, Sani Dauda Language acquisition Study and teaching. Research Vocabulary teaching Phonological development refers to the stages that children pass before they can correctly use and understand the sound system of their language. Inspired by Stampe’s (1969) Natural Phonology Theory, this paper examines the acquisition of Hausa secondary consonants pronunciation by the Hausa children. The paper seeks to achieve the following objectives (a) to identify the phonological processes that are operating in the production of the Hausa secondary consonants by the Hausa 2-5 years children (b) to discover the units that are more affected if certain changes occur in the production of the Hausa secondary consonants (c) to explain whether a parental behavior influence the children’s production of the Hausa secondary consonants. Four children aged between 2-5 years were purposely selected. The data were collected using a Pictorial Stimulus-Driven Elicitation. The study found that reduction, simplification, and substitution phonological processes operate in some of the children’s speech production. It also revealed that regardless of the glottal stop, the second unit of the secondary consonants is more affected and that parental behavior affects children’s speech production. The implication of this result is that it can be used by speech pathology to draw a conclusion about the Hausa children’s phonological development. Universiti Teknologi MARA, Kedah 2019 Article PeerReviewed text en http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/30671/1/AJ_SANI%20DAUDA%20IBRAHIM%20CPLT%20K%2019.pdf Ibrahim, Sani Dauda (2019) Phonological development: acquisition of hausa secondary consonants by the hausa children / Sani Dauda Ibrahim. Journal of Creative Practices in Language Learning and Teaching (CPLT), 7 (2). pp. 40-47. ISSN 1823-464X https://cplt.uitm.edu.my/
institution Universiti Teknologi Mara
building Tun Abdul Razak Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Mara
content_source UiTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.uitm.edu.my/
language English
topic Language acquisition
Study and teaching. Research
Vocabulary teaching
spellingShingle Language acquisition
Study and teaching. Research
Vocabulary teaching
Ibrahim, Sani Dauda
Phonological development: acquisition of hausa secondary consonants by the hausa children / Sani Dauda Ibrahim
description Phonological development refers to the stages that children pass before they can correctly use and understand the sound system of their language. Inspired by Stampe’s (1969) Natural Phonology Theory, this paper examines the acquisition of Hausa secondary consonants pronunciation by the Hausa children. The paper seeks to achieve the following objectives (a) to identify the phonological processes that are operating in the production of the Hausa secondary consonants by the Hausa 2-5 years children (b) to discover the units that are more affected if certain changes occur in the production of the Hausa secondary consonants (c) to explain whether a parental behavior influence the children’s production of the Hausa secondary consonants. Four children aged between 2-5 years were purposely selected. The data were collected using a Pictorial Stimulus-Driven Elicitation. The study found that reduction, simplification, and substitution phonological processes operate in some of the children’s speech production. It also revealed that regardless of the glottal stop, the second unit of the secondary consonants is more affected and that parental behavior affects children’s speech production. The implication of this result is that it can be used by speech pathology to draw a conclusion about the Hausa children’s phonological development.
format Article
author Ibrahim, Sani Dauda
author_facet Ibrahim, Sani Dauda
author_sort Ibrahim, Sani Dauda
title Phonological development: acquisition of hausa secondary consonants by the hausa children / Sani Dauda Ibrahim
title_short Phonological development: acquisition of hausa secondary consonants by the hausa children / Sani Dauda Ibrahim
title_full Phonological development: acquisition of hausa secondary consonants by the hausa children / Sani Dauda Ibrahim
title_fullStr Phonological development: acquisition of hausa secondary consonants by the hausa children / Sani Dauda Ibrahim
title_full_unstemmed Phonological development: acquisition of hausa secondary consonants by the hausa children / Sani Dauda Ibrahim
title_sort phonological development: acquisition of hausa secondary consonants by the hausa children / sani dauda ibrahim
publisher Universiti Teknologi MARA, Kedah
publishDate 2019
url http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/30671/1/AJ_SANI%20DAUDA%20IBRAHIM%20CPLT%20K%2019.pdf
http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/30671/
https://cplt.uitm.edu.my/
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