z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Second language acquisition of Spanish prosody by Chinese speakers: Nuclear contours and pitch characteristics
Author(s) -
Peizhu Shang,
Wendy ElviraGarcía
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
vigo international journal of applied linguistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.191
H-Index - 11
eISSN - 2660-504X
pISSN - 1697-0381
DOI - 10.35869/vial.v0i19.3762
Subject(s) - prosody , pitch accent , intonation (linguistics) , linguistics , psychology , sentence , stress (linguistics) , second language , philosophy
Despite the increasing number of studies in L2 prosody, little research has been carried out on the Chinese-Spanish language pair. This article sets out to examine the L2 acquisition of nuclear contours and pitch implementation details of Spanish spoken by Chinese speakers. To this end, 555 utterances (produced by 37 informants) were analyzed within an autosegmental-metrical framework, and pitch values were evaluated using long-term distributional (LTD) and pitch dynamism quotient (PDQ) measures. The results suggest a hierarchy of difficulties in acquiring the prosodic features of different sentence types. The most salient intonational error made by the Chinese learners was the tendency to replace low nuclear accents with high/rising tones. Furthermore, the higher pitch level, narrower span, and lower F0 variance found for Chinese speakers lend support to previous hypotheses which proposed a general pitch compression pattern for L2 speech. Nevertheless, with increasing proficiency in Spanish, learners appear to develop more target-like intonation contours and pitch profiles. Finally, gender and stress effects as well as other interactions prove that L2 prosody learning is more complex than previously stated, and is influenced not only by the L1 system and oral competence but is also correlated with some psychological and sociocultural factors.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here