Towards a Mental Representation of Vowel Height in SSBE Speakers

Authors

  • Kevin Mendousse
DOI: https://doi.org/10.6018/ijes.12.1.118251
Keywords: binarism, distinctive feature, phonetic symbolism, phonological perception, vowel height

Abstract

Vigorous debate in phonetics and phonology has focused on the structure and cognitive foundation of distinctive feature theory, as well as on the definition and representation of features themselves. In particular, we show in Section 1 that, although vowel height has long been the object of close scrutiny, research on the three- or more- tiered height representation of vowels in the phonology of English remains inconclusive. Section 2 reports on the rationale and methodology of a sound-symbolism experiment designed to evaluate the implicit phonological knowledge that English native speakers have of vowel height differences. In Section 3 we tabulate results and argue in Section 4 that their intuitive understanding of such differences is best accounted for in terms of a three- tiered height axis.

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Author Biography

Kevin Mendousse

Holds a PhD in linguistics and is currently a Senior Lecturer in the School of European Languages and Literatures at the University of Auckland, New Zealand, where he teaches both undergraduate and postgraduate courses in French language and linguistics. He is the author of a number of journal articles, conference papers and invited research seminars focusing primarily on distinctive feature theory and markedness theory, as they apply to the (morpho)phonology of French and/or English. His research interests also include a forthcoming book translation of original linguistic research carried out on the Ua Pou dialect of the Marquesan language.
Published
15-05-2012
How to Cite
Mendousse, K. (2012). Towards a Mental Representation of Vowel Height in SSBE Speakers. International Journal of English Studies, 12(1), 1–16. https://doi.org/10.6018/ijes.12.1.118251
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Articles