Abstract. A number of modifications affect the sound structure of foreign words as they are bor-rowed into Korean. We consider specifically the adaptation of word-final stops, liquids, and voiceless as well as voiced coronal sibilants. The particular manifestation of these is shown to corre-late with the place they hold in the syllable structure of the recipient language rather than, as might seem to be the case, with either contrastive categories of the source language or allophonic qualities of the recipient. This discussion thus contributes to the continuing debate over the awareness that listeners may have of phonetic properties that are contrastive in the source language but redundant in the recipient (and hence presumably below the th...
1900's, many of the principles of contrastive analysis (CA) have established themselves as axio...
This study tests whether potential differences in the perceptual robustness of speech sounds influen...
This study aims to investigate the patterns of English liquid loans in Korean by an OT analysis. The...
This paper examines the validity of the conventional phonological idea that sounds that serve a cont...
We show that loanword adaptation can be understood entirely in terms of phonological and phonetic co...
This paper explores several factors that affect the adaptation of foreign liquids (primarily from En...
Japanese and Korean loanwords are very similar in meaning and pronunciation. Nevertheless, it is har...
This paper examines the relationship between production and perception of prosodically marked lexica...
This paper examines English-based loanwords in Standard Mandarin in light of various proposals on ho...
This paper investigates the adaptation of rhotic consonant codas in Korean loanword phonology. The h...
The goal of the paper is to test two alternative approaches to loanword adaptation. The ‘strict phon...
English nouns that are borrowed into Korean as ending in [t] are lexicalized as if they ended in /s/...
This paper investigates sound substitutions that occur in English loanwords in Korean within the the...
Where there is dialectal variability in production of a sound contrast, listeners from the two diale...
Loanword corpora have been an important tool in studying the relationship between speech perception ...
1900's, many of the principles of contrastive analysis (CA) have established themselves as axio...
This study tests whether potential differences in the perceptual robustness of speech sounds influen...
This study aims to investigate the patterns of English liquid loans in Korean by an OT analysis. The...
This paper examines the validity of the conventional phonological idea that sounds that serve a cont...
We show that loanword adaptation can be understood entirely in terms of phonological and phonetic co...
This paper explores several factors that affect the adaptation of foreign liquids (primarily from En...
Japanese and Korean loanwords are very similar in meaning and pronunciation. Nevertheless, it is har...
This paper examines the relationship between production and perception of prosodically marked lexica...
This paper examines English-based loanwords in Standard Mandarin in light of various proposals on ho...
This paper investigates the adaptation of rhotic consonant codas in Korean loanword phonology. The h...
The goal of the paper is to test two alternative approaches to loanword adaptation. The ‘strict phon...
English nouns that are borrowed into Korean as ending in [t] are lexicalized as if they ended in /s/...
This paper investigates sound substitutions that occur in English loanwords in Korean within the the...
Where there is dialectal variability in production of a sound contrast, listeners from the two diale...
Loanword corpora have been an important tool in studying the relationship between speech perception ...
1900's, many of the principles of contrastive analysis (CA) have established themselves as axio...
This study tests whether potential differences in the perceptual robustness of speech sounds influen...
This study aims to investigate the patterns of English liquid loans in Korean by an OT analysis. The...