Abstract
Abstract
This study investigates tone mergers in the Cantonese spoken in
Hong Kong, Macao, and Zhuhai. From these three cities, 150 native Cantonese
speakers were recruited, stratified by gender and age. Acoustic analyses show
that Hong Kong Cantonese and Macao Cantonese are actively merging T2[25] and
T5[23], T3[33] and T6[22], thus becoming similar to Zhuhai Cantonese in tonal
inventory. The social motivations of the changes are attributed to contact among
these Cantonese-speaking communities as well as their contact with Putonghua.
Responses to a questionnaire on language use in different domains shows the
spread of Putonghua in Hong Kong and Macao and seems to correlate with the
advance of the tone mergers. More specifically, the spread of Putonghua in Hong
Kong seems to be rolling back the effects of Cantonese standardization, as shown
by the tone mergers in the youngest generation in Hong Kong.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Reference45 articles.
1. Cantonese sound change across subgroups of the Hong Kong speech
community;Bauer;Journal of Chinese Linguistics,1983
2. The microhistory of a sound change in progress in Hong Kong
Cantonese;Bauer;Journal of Chinese Linguistics,1986
3. Modern Cantonese Phonology
4. Variation and merger of the rising tones in Hong Kong Cantonese
5. Sui, Gang, Ao Sandi Yueyu Danzidiao de Shengxue
Bijiao Fenxi;Bei;Nankai Linguistics,2016
Cited by
20 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献