Affiliation:
1. University of Cambridge
Abstract
Abstract
This study examined the English accents of English-Malay bilinguals in Singapore to ascertain whether language
dominance was a determinant of accent variation in Singapore English, with a hypothesis that a Malay-dominant bilingual would have
more ethnic-specific features than an English-dominant one. Ten English-Malay bilinguals – five English-dominant and five
Malay-dominant – who differed greatly in their language dominance took part in this study. In an ethnic discriminability task that
involved 60 naïve raters, Malay-dominant bilinguals were significantly more often correctly identified as ethnically Malay and
were rated as having a significantly more perceivable Malay-accented English accent, while those who were English-dominant had an
English accent that lacked ethnic-specific features so much so that naïve raters, including raters who were English-Malay
bilinguals, were less able to identify the speakers as ethnically Malay. The results of this study indicate that early sequential
bilinguals or simultaneous bilinguals of the same two languages need not have similar accents. The findings also suggest that
language dominance is a determinant of accent variation in Singapore English, at least for the English-Malay bilinguals.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference88 articles.
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