Journal article
Lenition, fortition, and lexical access in Iwaidja and Mawng
RL Bundgaard-Nielsen, R Mailhammer, BJ Baker, Y Wang, M Harvey, C Turner
Laboratory Phonology | Open Library of Humanities | Published : 2025
Abstract
Many models of word recognition assume that spoken words are faithful to their phonological shape in the lexicon and that word recognition begins with the first incoming segment and proceeds linearly. Some languages, however, including Mawng and Iwaidja (Australia), exhibit alternations in word-initial segments, rendering these segments potentially unreliable. We tested the effect of word-initial segmental variability in Mawng and Iwaidja in a Two-Alternate Forced Choice experiment which paired canonical productions of nouns with forms beginning with both attested and non-attested variant onsets. All participants preferred canonical forms, but Mawng speakers were tolerant of /g/-initial leni..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council