Abstract

Purpose: A developmental hierarchy of phonetic feature complexity has been proposed, suggesting that later emerging sounds have greater articulatory complexity than those learned earlier. The aim of this research was to explore this hierarchy in a relatively unexplored language, Icelandic.Method: Twenty-eight typically-developing Icelandic-speaking children were tested at 2;4 and 3;4 years. Word-initial and word-medial phonemic inventories and a phonemic implicational hierarchy are described.Result: The frequency of occurrence of Icelandic consonants in the speech of 2;4 and 3;4 year old children was, from most to least frequent, n, s, t, p, r, m, l, k, f, ʋ, j, ɵ, h, kʰ, c, , ɰ, pʰ, tʰ, cʰ, ç, , , .Conclusion: Consonant frequency was a strong predictor of consonant accuracy at 2;4 months (r(23) = −0.75), but the effect was weaker at 3;4 months (r(23) = −0.51). Acquisition of /c/, // and /l/ occurred earlier, relative to English, Swedish, Dutch and German. A frequency-bound practice effect on emerging consonants is proposed to account for the early emergence of /c/, // and /l/ in Icelandic.

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