The homogenization of ethnic differences in Singapore English? A consonantal production study
Past research on Singapore English (SgE) has shown that there are specific segmental and prosodic patterns that are unique to the three major ethnic groups, Chinese, Malay, and Indian in Singapore. These features have been highlighted as the "stereotypical" ethnic markers of SgE speakers,...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1464622021-02-18T01:54:32Z The homogenization of ethnic differences in Singapore English? A consonantal production study Kalaivanan, Kastoori Sumartono, Firqin Tan, Ying Ying School of Humanities Humanities::Linguistics Singapore English Consonants Past research on Singapore English (SgE) has shown that there are specific segmental and prosodic patterns that are unique to the three major ethnic groups, Chinese, Malay, and Indian in Singapore. These features have been highlighted as the "stereotypical" ethnic markers of SgE speakers, assuming substrate influence from the speakers' "ethnic" languages (Mandarin, Malay, and Tamil). However, recent research suggests that Singaporeans are becoming increasingly English dominant and has challenged the position of the ethnic languages as true "mother tongues" of Singaporeans. Hence, this study seeks to question if such "stereotypical" ethnic features exist, and if so, the extent to which a less dominant ethnic language would affect the phonology of speakers' English. This study looks specifically at the production of consonants /f/, /θ/, /t/, /v/, and /w/ as salient segmental features in SgE. Participants' phonetic behavior of /θ/, which was produced similarly across the three ethnic groups, disputed substrate influence. Tamil speakers were the most disparate, particularly with the /v/-/w/ contrast production. However, these deviations were often sporadic phonetic changes, which scarcely reflect robust speech patterns in the community. As a result, consonantal production in SgE is found to be largely independent of substrate influence and relatively uniform across the three ethnicities. The homogeneity observed in this study sheds light on bilinguals' acquisition of sounds, and it also provides phonological evidence toward the understanding of the evolutionary process of postcolonial Englishes. Ministry of Education (MOE) The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/ or publication of this article: This research is supported by the Ministry of Education, Singapore, under its Academic Research Fund Tier 2 (MOE2015-T2-1-120). 2021-02-18T01:54:32Z 2021-02-18T01:54:32Z 2020 Journal Article Kalaivanan, K., Sumartono, F., & Tan, Y. Y. (2020). The homogenization of ethnic differences in Singapore English? A consonantal production study. Language and Speech, [Early Access}. doi:10.1177/0023830920925510 0023-8309 0000-0002-9880-4968 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146462 10.1177/0023830920925510 32484011 2-s2.0-85085878309 en MOE2015-T2-1-120 Language and Speech © 2020 The Author(s). All rights reserved. |
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Humanities::Linguistics Singapore English Consonants Kalaivanan, Kastoori Sumartono, Firqin Tan, Ying Ying The homogenization of ethnic differences in Singapore English? A consonantal production study |
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Past research on Singapore English (SgE) has shown that there are specific segmental and prosodic patterns that are unique to the three major ethnic groups, Chinese, Malay, and Indian in Singapore. These features have been highlighted as the "stereotypical" ethnic markers of SgE speakers, assuming substrate influence from the speakers' "ethnic" languages (Mandarin, Malay, and Tamil). However, recent research suggests that Singaporeans are becoming increasingly English dominant and has challenged the position of the ethnic languages as true "mother tongues" of Singaporeans. Hence, this study seeks to question if such "stereotypical" ethnic features exist, and if so, the extent to which a less dominant ethnic language would affect the phonology of speakers' English. This study looks specifically at the production of consonants /f/, /θ/, /t/, /v/, and /w/ as salient segmental features in SgE. Participants' phonetic behavior of /θ/, which was produced similarly across the three ethnic groups, disputed substrate influence. Tamil speakers were the most disparate, particularly with the /v/-/w/ contrast production. However, these deviations were often sporadic phonetic changes, which scarcely reflect robust speech patterns in the community. As a result, consonantal production in SgE is found to be largely independent of substrate influence and relatively uniform across the three ethnicities. The homogeneity observed in this study sheds light on bilinguals' acquisition of sounds, and it also provides phonological evidence toward the understanding of the evolutionary process of postcolonial Englishes. |
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School of Humanities |
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School of Humanities Kalaivanan, Kastoori Sumartono, Firqin Tan, Ying Ying |
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Article |
author |
Kalaivanan, Kastoori Sumartono, Firqin Tan, Ying Ying |
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Kalaivanan, Kastoori |
title |
The homogenization of ethnic differences in Singapore English? A consonantal production study |
title_short |
The homogenization of ethnic differences in Singapore English? A consonantal production study |
title_full |
The homogenization of ethnic differences in Singapore English? A consonantal production study |
title_fullStr |
The homogenization of ethnic differences in Singapore English? A consonantal production study |
title_full_unstemmed |
The homogenization of ethnic differences in Singapore English? A consonantal production study |
title_sort |
homogenization of ethnic differences in singapore english? a consonantal production study |
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2021 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146462 |
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