Abstract

German nouns may alternate from singular to plural in two different ways. Some singular forms that end in a voiceless obstruent have a plural in which this obstruent is voiced. Another alternation concerns the vowel. Some singular forms with a back vowel have a plural form in which this back vowel is front. For each noun it has to be established individually whether it alternates or not. The voicing alternation is phonetically grounded, but the vowel alternation is not. Knowledge about such alternations involves two things. First, it involves knowledge of which words alternate and which words do not and second, it involves the ability to extend the alternations to novel words. We studied the knowledge of which words alternate and the proportion to which they alternate in two corpus studies. We studied the knowledge of speakers concerning which words alternate and what generalizations can be based upon these words by means of a production study. The production study involved words and nonces. We asked twenty 5 year-olds, twenty 7 year-olds, and ten adults to produce the plural for a given singular word and a plural for a given singular nonce. In the corpus study we found that both alternations occur with the same frequency. In the production of alternations in words we found that participants in all age groups make few mistakes. With respect to the production of alternations in nonce words, we found that the proportion of voicing alternations decreases with age, while the proportion of vowel alternations increases. We explain this change in the ability to generalize the alternations to nonces on the basis of the confidence speakers can have in a generalization. Young children have a small lexicon and they can form relatively unreliable generalizations on lexical distributions. They are, however, proficient users of language and have great phonetic experience. They can more confidently form generalizations on the basis of this experience. Adults have a large lexicon and, as a consequence, they can confidently form generalizations based on their lexicon. In addition, they know that many alternations are not based on phonetic considerations.

Highlights

  • The pronunciation of a word often varies with morphological context

  • With respect to the production of alternations in nonce words, we found that the proportion of voicing alternations decreases with age, while the proportion of vowel alternations increases

  • We ran a production experiment in order to study the development of generalizations concerning voicing and vowel alternations in German nouns

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Summary

Introduction

The pronunciation of a word often varies with morphological context Such variation is referred to as an alternation. An example of the first alternation is provided by the singular and the plural of the word [bE5k] mountain (Berg). The singular ends in a voiceless obstruent, but this obstruent is pronounced as voiced in the plural [bE5g@] mountains (Berge). This alternation is referred to in this paper as a voicing alternation. An example of the second alternation is provided by the singular and the plural of the word [ku:] cow (Kuh). The back vowel in the singular corresponds to a front vowel in the plural: [ky:@] cows (Kühe) This alternation is referred to in this paper as a vowel alternation. Both alternations are unpredictable in the sense that one needs to know whether or not a word alternates; many words have no alternation

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