The Effect of Indian Contact and Glaswegian Contact on the Phonetic Backward Transfer of Glaswegian English (L2) on Hindi and Indian English (L1)

Author:

Shaktawat Divyanshi1

Affiliation:

1. English Language and Linguistics, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, UK

Abstract

This study examined phonetic backward transfer in ‘Glaswasians’, the ethnolinguistic minority of first-generation bilingual immigrant Indians in Glasgow (Scotland), who present a situation of contact between their native languages of Hindi and Indian English (L1s) and the dominant host language and dialect, Glaswegian English (L2). This was examined in relation to the Revised Speech Learning Model (SLM-r) and Speech Accommodation Framework. These predict that the migrants’ L1 sound categories can either shift to become more Glaswegian-like (‘assimilation’ or ‘convergence’) or exaggeratedly Indian-like (‘dissimilation’ or ‘divergence’) or remain unchanged. The effect of Indian and Glaswegian Contact on transfer was also investigated. Two control groups (Indians and Glaswegians) and the experimental group (Glaswasians) were recorded reading English and Hindi sentences containing multiple phones which were examined for multiple phonetic features (/t/—VOT, /l/—F2-F1 difference, /b d g/—Relative Burst Intensity). In both languages, Glaswasian /t/ and /g/ became more Glaswegian-like (assimilation), whereas F2-F1 difference in /l/ became exaggeratedly Indian-like (dissimilation). Higher Indian Contact was associated with more native-like values in /t/ and /l/ in Hindi but had no influence on /g/. Higher Glaswegian Contact was related to increased assimilation of /g/ in English but had no effect on /l/ and /t/.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference136 articles.

1. Alam, Farhana (2015). “Glaswasian”?: A Sociophonetic Analysis of Glasgow-Asian Accent and Identity, University of Glasgow.

2. Hundt, Marianne, and Sharma, Devyani (2014). Identity, Ethnicity, and Fine Phonetic Detail: An Acoustic Phonetic Analysis of Syllable-Initial/t/ in Glaswegian Girls of Pakistani Heritage, John Benjamins Publishing Company. [1st ed.].

3. Alshangiti, Wafa, and Evans, Bronwen (, January August). Regional Accent Accommodation in Spontaneous Speech: Evidence For Long-Term Accent Change?. Paper presented at the ICPhS XVII, Hong Kong, China.

4. Voice onset time in Indian English-accented speech;Awan;Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics,2011

5. Babel, Molly (2020, January 08). Phonetic and Social Selectivity in Speech Accommodation Accommodation. Available online: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1mb4n1mv.

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