We investigate Vietnamese and Cambodian immigrants' acquisition of the variable (ing), which occurs in progressive tenses, participles, noun phrases, etc., and which can be pronounced [iŋ] or [In]. A VARBRUL 2 program analysis of native speaker speech shows that the production of (ing) is constrained by phonological, grammatical, stylistic, and social factors. An analysis of the nonnative speakers' acquisition of these norms shows that [In] is more frequent before anterior segments (reflecting ease of articulation), and that males use [In] more frequently than females, especially in monitored speech (perhaps reflecting their desire to accommodate to a male native speaker norm rather than to an overall native speaker norm). The analysis also...
Based on Kachru’s Three Circle Model on the spread of English in different parts of the world, I que...
The phenomenon of the foreign accent has long been of interest to linguists, second language teacher...
AbstractSeveral recent theories have suggested that an increase in the number of non-native speakers...
We investigate Vietnamese and Cambodian immigrants ' acquisition of the variable (ing), which o...
This paper examines the extent to which 1st to 2nd generation Koreans in the U.S. have acquired the ...
This study explores the use of kin terms in a corpus of Vietnamese–English bilingual spontaneous con...
This study compares utterances by Vietnamese learners of Australian English with those of native sub...
A study of one of the most recurrent and persistent obstacles ir learning English as a second langua...
Abstract This paper examines the intonation of English statements and questions produced by Vietname...
Past research on Singapore English (SgE) has shown that there are specific segmental and prosodic pa...
Since its introduction to Malaya by the British in the 18th century, the English language spoken in ...
This dissertation addresses Korean Americans as speakers of English and as a unified speech communit...
This study investigates the use of the (ing) variable in the speech of Swedish L2 speakers of Englis...
This paper investigates the English language spoken by four educated Japanese speakers from an acous...
This dissertation addresses Korean Americans as speakers of English and as a unified speech communit...
Based on Kachru’s Three Circle Model on the spread of English in different parts of the world, I que...
The phenomenon of the foreign accent has long been of interest to linguists, second language teacher...
AbstractSeveral recent theories have suggested that an increase in the number of non-native speakers...
We investigate Vietnamese and Cambodian immigrants ' acquisition of the variable (ing), which o...
This paper examines the extent to which 1st to 2nd generation Koreans in the U.S. have acquired the ...
This study explores the use of kin terms in a corpus of Vietnamese–English bilingual spontaneous con...
This study compares utterances by Vietnamese learners of Australian English with those of native sub...
A study of one of the most recurrent and persistent obstacles ir learning English as a second langua...
Abstract This paper examines the intonation of English statements and questions produced by Vietname...
Past research on Singapore English (SgE) has shown that there are specific segmental and prosodic pa...
Since its introduction to Malaya by the British in the 18th century, the English language spoken in ...
This dissertation addresses Korean Americans as speakers of English and as a unified speech communit...
This study investigates the use of the (ing) variable in the speech of Swedish L2 speakers of Englis...
This paper investigates the English language spoken by four educated Japanese speakers from an acous...
This dissertation addresses Korean Americans as speakers of English and as a unified speech communit...
Based on Kachru’s Three Circle Model on the spread of English in different parts of the world, I que...
The phenomenon of the foreign accent has long been of interest to linguists, second language teacher...
AbstractSeveral recent theories have suggested that an increase in the number of non-native speakers...