3.8 Article

Phonological acquisition in Vietnamese-speaking children with central dialect

Journal

SPEECH LANGUAGE AND HEARING
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/2050571X.2023.2289252

Keywords

Vietnamese; central dialect; speech acquisition; phonological acquisition

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The current study investigated the phonological development in 3 to 7-year-old Vietnamese-speaking children with central dialect. The findings showed similar speech acquisition patterns compared to children with other dialects and languages, but also revealed some differences in the age of acquisition for individual consonants. The study provides a more comprehensive understanding of speech acquisition patterns in Vietnamese children and Vietnamese dialectal variants.
The current study investigated the phonological development in 3 to 7-year-old Vietnamesespeaking children with central dialect. Previous studies of speech development in Vietnamesespeaking children have focused on northern and southern dialects. The central Vietnamese dialect has distinct dialectal features. Therefore, it is essential to examine speech acquisition in children with central dialect to diagnose speech sound disorders accurately. Speech samples were collected from 80 children. Two native Vietnamese speakers transcribed children's speech productions independently using IPA symbols. The percentage of consonants correct, the percentage of initial consonants correct, the percentage of final consonants correct, the percentage of semivowels correct, and the percentage of vowels correct were calculated for age and sex groups. Ages of acquisition of individual consonants and phonological patterns were also identified. Overall, central Vietnamese-speaking children showed similar speech acquisition patterns compared to children with northern and southern Vietnamese dialects and other languages (e.g., vowels and semivowels were acquired early, and bilabials were acquired earlier than retroflex sounds). However, several differences from other dialects were also found in the age of acquisition for individual consonants (e.g., initial consonants /v/, /c/ and final consonants /k/, /(sic)/, /(sic)/). Central Vietnamese-speaking children produced initial /b/, /j/, /s/, /r/ and final /k/, /(sic)/ as dialectal variants for initial /p/, /z/, /(sic)/, /(sic)/ and final /t/, /n/, respectively. The current study's findings help us obtain a more comprehensive understanding of speech acquisition patterns in Vietnamese children and Vietnamese dialectal variants.

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