The effects in varying contexts on the adding and dropping of [h] by grade IV and grade IX students on New World Island, Newfoundland

The basic purpose of this study was to observe the effects of the varying phonetic and grammatical contexts on the adding and the “dropping” of the aspirate. -- To achieve this end, an instrument was employed. This instrument included 24 consonants and 16 vowels, 6 of which were lax or short; 9 of w...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Whalen, John
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 1978
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/7467/
https://research.library.mun.ca/7467/1/Whalen_John.pdf
https://research.library.mun.ca/7467/3/Whalen_John.pdf
Description
Summary:The basic purpose of this study was to observe the effects of the varying phonetic and grammatical contexts on the adding and the “dropping” of the aspirate. -- To achieve this end, an instrument was employed. This instrument included 24 consonants and 16 vowels, 6 of which were lax or short; 9 of which were tense of long; and 1 which was the neutral vowel schwa [ǝ] (see Appendix A). -- The population chosen for the study consisted of all Grade IV and Grade IX Pentecostal students on New World Island, Newfoundland. -- The instrument was in two parts - Area A concerned the adding of the [h] and Area B concerned the “dropping” of the [h]. Both parts were divided into eleven different contexts in which people added or “dropped” the [h] sound. -- Seventy student informants - forty-two at Summerford, twenty-eight at Chapel Island - were involved. The author found that [h] occurred more frequently: -- i. at word boundaries rather than within words; -- ii. before stressed vowels rather than before unstressed vowels; -- iii. after preceding vowels rather than after preceding consonants; -- iv. before unrounded vowels (front and low types) rather than before rounded vowels; -- v. on nouns preceded by certain determiners; that is, with high frequency after the definite article “the” with medium frequency after the indefinite article “a/an” and with lower frequency after the demonstratives “this/that/ these/those” (these results are compatible with the findings in (2) and (3) above).