Not all forms of dialect contact are the same: Effects of regional media, travel, and social contacts on the perception of Spanish aspirated-/s/

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7557/1.4.1.3284

Keywords:

dialect contact, sociophonetic perception, /s/-weakening, social networks, Media

Abstract

Previous work has found that speakers who move to a new dialect region may come to adopt features of the second dialect. This study investigates whether other types of dialect exposure – those present without ever leaving one’s home dialectal region – similarly result in differences in language use. An identification task and a dialect contact questionnaire were administered to two Spanish-speaking dialect groups in Latin America to determine the effect of different types of dialect contact on the perceptual categorization of the regionally and socially variable feature of syllable-final /s/-aspiration (e.g., fresco [fɾeh.ko], ‘fresh’). Short-term travel and exposure to Media from /s/-weakening regions were not found to play a role in identification of aspirated-/s/. However, the regional background of reported social contacts (i.e., the social network) was a significant factor in how the regional variant was identified. Findings highlight the importance of live social interaction in language contact and change.

Author Biography

Lauren B. Schmidt, San Diego State University

Assistant Professor of Spanish,

Department of Anthropology, Sociology and Languages

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Published

2015-05-29

How to Cite

Schmidt, L. B. (2015). Not all forms of dialect contact are the same: Effects of regional media, travel, and social contacts on the perception of Spanish aspirated-/s/. Borealis – An International Journal of Hispanic Linguistics, 4(1), 99–120. https://doi.org/10.7557/1.4.1.3284

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Articles