Abstract

Spanish complex onsets have been traditionally described as consisting of a stop (/p, t, k, b, d, g/) or the fricative /f/ plus a liquid. Given that all Spanish varieties have other fricatives (/x, s/), the obstruents that can form part of an onset cluster do not straightforwardly compose a natural class. As such, past studies have argued that /f/ is exceptional in its ability as a fricative to pattern with stops in onset clusters. This paper presents empirical data from a nonce word judgment task that challenges this claim and shows that Spanish listeners rate unattested /xr/ clusters as more acceptable than ungrammatical /sr/ clusters. These results suggest that /s/, and not /f/, is exceptional in its inability to form complex onsets in Spanish. As /s/ is the sole sibilant in the Spanish consonant inventory and is uniquely characterized by the feature [strident], this generalization is easily capturable in an Optimality Theory framework. This analysis further predicts that other non-sibilant fricatives should also be acceptable in onset cluster position, such as /θ/, which is supported by data from a follow-up study with speakers of Peninsular Spanish who have this phoneme in their dialect. This analysis also predicts that other sibilants should be unacceptable in onset clusters. This is supported by data from the related languages Portuguese and Catalan that have other sibilant phonemes (/z, ʃ, ʒ/)yet also have similar onset cluster phonotactics as Spanish in that they disallow all sibilants from being in an onset cluster.

Highlights

  • Many languages allow clusters of two or more sounds to appear at the beginning of a syllable

  • The grammaticality judgments of /xɾ/ clusters were compared against those of /sɾ/, which are ungrammatical, and /fɾ/, which are grammatical, in order to shed light on the phonotactic constraints that apply to onset clusters in Spanish

  • The criteria were set at correctly identifying at least 71.4% /xɾ/ clusters and 85.7% or higher accuracy on the other fricative clusters

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Summary

Introduction

Many languages allow clusters of two or more sounds to appear at the beginning of a syllable. Spanish onset clusters Spanish varieties can differ in their realization of some phonemes, all varieties include voiced and voiceless labial, coronal, and velar stops, along with the lenited variants of the voiced stops ([p, t, k, b, d, g, β, ð, ɣ]). The canonical description of licit onset clusters in Spanish has been described as being maximally composed of a voiced or voiceless stop or /f/ plus a liquid (/l, ɾ/) (Harris 1983). Examples of these licit complex onsets can be seen, with Latin American Spanish transcriptions..

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