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4. The acquisition process

So far we have been mainly concerned with letter-phoneme correspondences in English (or the lack of them), with word stress, and with weak forms. That is, you have now been given all the information you need to enable you to determine the phonemic representation of GA words, and to no longer be misled by the spelling. But really, we have devoted very little attention to the second of the two problems identified in Chapter 1, that of interference from the native language. In this chapter we will therefore consider the process of learning the pronunciation of a second language and the difficulties created by this interference from the first language. Because in our case that first language is Dutch, we will introduce the phonemes of that language in the final sections of this chapter. But before we do so, we must have a look at the question of how phonemes are pronounced.

 

This chapter consists of the following parts:

4.1 The pronunciation of phonemes

4.1.1 Allophones

4.1.2 Stylistic variants

4.2 Interference

4.3 Acquiring the pronunciation of a foreign language

4.4 A transcription system for AN

4.5 The vowel system of AN

4.6 The consonant system of AN

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An Introduction to American English Phonetics Copyright © by Ton Broeders and Carlos Gussenhoven is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.