Native speakers are often surprised by the way different languages adapt their words; the same phoneme may be borrowed into different languages in different ways. Even related languages need not adapt the same phoneme in an identical fashion. Evidence from a variety of languages suggests that during loan adaptation, the underlying phonological systems of the donor language need to match those of the borrowing language, as has been proposed by many in the literature. Here we show that the universal principle of “PLACE first”, which promotes overlapping place of articulation features (including ARTICULATORS and TONGUE HEIGHT), guides the substitution choice, resulting in different outputs from the same loan.</p
The two key questions recurring in the literature on loanword studies are: are there any general pat...
Following phonological and phonetic models of loanword adaptation, I present evidence from Burmese i...
Following phonological and phonetic models of loanword adaptation, I present evidence from Burmese i...
Native speakers are often surprised by the way different languages adapt their words; the same phone...
This paper presents a phonological analysis of loanword adaptation of English loanwords into several...
This dissertation is a study of Mandarin Chinese loanword phonology, with focus on phoneme substitut...
Since it has been realized that loanword phonology is an important source of phonological evidence, ...
We show that loanword adaptation can be understood entirely in terms of phonological and phonetic co...
Optimality-Theoretic analyses of loanword phonology account for the phonological adaptations seen in...
Loanwords may or may not affect the phonological system of a language. Much of the loanword literatu...
Loanwords are a typical by-product of a language contact situation. In the realm of loanword phonol...
This paper analyzes the corpus of English loanwords into Fijian assembled by Schütz (1978) from the ...
In recent studies of loanword adaptation, two main sides have emerged. On the one hand, phonetic acc...
Following phonological and phonetic models of loanword adaptation, I present evidence from Burmese i...
This paper examines English-based loanwords in Standard Mandarin in light of various proposals on ho...
The two key questions recurring in the literature on loanword studies are: are there any general pat...
Following phonological and phonetic models of loanword adaptation, I present evidence from Burmese i...
Following phonological and phonetic models of loanword adaptation, I present evidence from Burmese i...
Native speakers are often surprised by the way different languages adapt their words; the same phone...
This paper presents a phonological analysis of loanword adaptation of English loanwords into several...
This dissertation is a study of Mandarin Chinese loanword phonology, with focus on phoneme substitut...
Since it has been realized that loanword phonology is an important source of phonological evidence, ...
We show that loanword adaptation can be understood entirely in terms of phonological and phonetic co...
Optimality-Theoretic analyses of loanword phonology account for the phonological adaptations seen in...
Loanwords may or may not affect the phonological system of a language. Much of the loanword literatu...
Loanwords are a typical by-product of a language contact situation. In the realm of loanword phonol...
This paper analyzes the corpus of English loanwords into Fijian assembled by Schütz (1978) from the ...
In recent studies of loanword adaptation, two main sides have emerged. On the one hand, phonetic acc...
Following phonological and phonetic models of loanword adaptation, I present evidence from Burmese i...
This paper examines English-based loanwords in Standard Mandarin in light of various proposals on ho...
The two key questions recurring in the literature on loanword studies are: are there any general pat...
Following phonological and phonetic models of loanword adaptation, I present evidence from Burmese i...
Following phonological and phonetic models of loanword adaptation, I present evidence from Burmese i...