The Phonetic and Morphosyntactic Dimensions of Grammatical Gender in Spanish Heritage Language Acquisition

Author:

Pérez-Leroux Ana Teresa1ORCID,López Yadira Álvarez2ORCID,Barreto Miguel3ORCID,Cuza Alejandro4ORCID,Marinescu Irina2ORCID,Yang Jierui2ORCID,Colantoni Laura5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Professor and Chair, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, University of Toronto https://dx.doi.org/7938 Toronto, ON Canada

2. Research Associate, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, University of Toronto https://dx.doi.org/7938 Toronto, ON Canada

3. Doctoral student, Department of Statistics, University of Toronto https://dx.doi.org/7938 Toronto, ON Canada

4. Professor, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, Purdue University https://dx.doi.org/311308 Lafayette, IN USA

5. Professor, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, University of Toronto https://dx.doi.org/7938 Toronto, ON Canada

Abstract

Abstract Previous studies disagree as to whether heritage bilinguals demonstrate loss of knowledge of Spanish grammatical gender. As phonetic variability is known to affect the acquisition of certain grammatical markers, we examine whether bilinguals’ gender difficulties relate to bilingual contact-induced phonetic variability, namely, reduction in the inventory of word-final unstressed vowels. We analyzed narratives from children in the United States (n = 49, ages 4–12). All NP  s (n = 1415) were analyzed for structure, noun class, and morphology. Word-final vowels were sub-selected for acoustic analyses. Morpho-syntactically, group results show high accuracy with gender (95%), but with wide individual variation (44%–100%). Speakers also show individual variability and substantive numbers of vowel misclassifications (6%–33%) with higher variability for /a/ and /o/. We found bilingual effects in both domains but no association between phonetics and gender accuracy. These findings have implications for the relationship between phonetics and grammar, and for the morphosyntax of Spanish gender.

Funder

Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Brill

Reference84 articles.

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3. Cálculo de frecuencias de aparición de fonemas y alófonos en español actual utilizando un transcriptor automático;Arias Rodríguez, I.

4. Spanish-speaking children’s production of number morphology;Arias-Trejo, N.

5. Gender assignment strategies among simultaneous Spanish/English bilingual children from Miami, Florida;Balam, O.

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