Open Access
Chapter 5. When three equals tree
Pavel Trofimovich,Paul John +1 more
- 24 Mar 2011
- pp 105-129
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TL;DR: This study used auditory priming to examine the phonological content of lexical entries for adult second language speakers and found that participants did not distinguish between these pairs of words in their lexicons, but were able to produce at least some of the words containing English /ð/ and /θ/ accurately.
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Abstract: In this study, we used auditory priming to examine the phonological content of lexical entries for adult second language speakers In particular, we investigated whether, for native speakers of Quebec French, words like they and day as well as three and tree have identical (ie, homophonous) phonological forms in these speakers’ lexicons, which would explain these speakers’ difficulty producing and perceiving words containing difficult /ð/ and /θ/ consonants We found that our participants did not distinguish between these pairs of words in their lexicons, but were able to produce at least some of the words containing English /ð/ and /θ/ accurately We discuss both theoretical and pedagogical implications of these findings
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Citations
Asymmetric lexical access and fuzzy lexical representations in second language learners
TL;DR: This paper found that learners can establish separate lexical representations for confusable categories, as shown by asymmetric patterns of lexical access, but the source of this asymmetry is not clear (Cutler et al., 2006).
96
References
Asymmetric lexical access and fuzzy lexical representations in second language learners
TL;DR: This paper found that learners can establish separate lexical representations for confusable categories, as shown by asymmetric patterns of lexical access, but the source of this asymmetry is not clear (Cutler et al., 2006).
96