Production and perception across three Hong Kong Cantonese consonant mergers: Community- and individual-level perspectives

Author:

Cheng Lauretta S. P.1,Babel Molly2,Yao Yao3

Affiliation:

1. University of Michigan

2. University of British Columbia

3. The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Abstract

Individual variation is key to understanding phenomena in phonetic variation and change, including the production-perception link. To test the generalizability of this relationship, this study compares community- and individual-level variation across three long-standing consonant mergers in Hong Kong Cantonese speakers: [n]→[l], [ŋ̩]→[m̩], and [ŋ]↔Ø. Concurrently, we document these understudied mergers in a community that has undergone rapid social change in recent decades. Younger (college-aged) and older (middle-aged) Hong Kongers completed a reading production task followed by a forced-choice lexical identification perception task. Group-level results suggest mismatching production and perception: While the community overall distinguished merger pairs in production, younger listeners are more perceptually categorical than older listeners. However, aggregate results obscure the fact that individuals vary substantially in the extent of merging in both perception and production, including many who exhibit complete merger, and that individual-level production-perception correlations were found for [n]→[l] and [ŋ̩]→[m̩], though not [ŋ]↔Ø. Results are discussed in the context of previous research. We find that (i) these mergers have diverged from predicted trajectories of completion, and (ii) overall, prior findings on the production-perception link are generalizable to these consonant mergers.

Publisher

Open Library of the Humanities

Subject

Computer Science Applications,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference86 articles.

1. Bauer, R. S. (1982a). Cantonese Sociolinguistic Patterns: Correlating Social Characteristics of Speakers with Phonological Variables in Hong Kong Cantonese (Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Berkeley). https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1sn2f75h

2. Lexical Diffusion in Hong Kong Cantonese: “Five” Leads the Way;Bauer, R. S.;Proceedings of the 8th Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society,1982b

3. Bauer, R. S. (1986). The Microhistory of a sound change in progress in Hong Kong Cantonese / 香港粤语中一个正在进行的音变的微观历史. Journal of Chinese Linguistics, 14(1), 1–42. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23754216

4. Bauer, R. S., & Benedict, P. K. (1997). Modern Cantonese Phonology. In Modern Cantonese Phonology. De Gruyter Mouton. http://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110823707/html. DOI: 10.1515/9783110823707

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