Na-Young Ryu (Ph.D. 2019, now at Pennsylvania State University), Yoonjung Kang (faculty), and Sungwoo Han (Inha University) have a new paper in Language Research, 56(2): "The effects of phonetic duration on loanword adaptation: Mandarin falling diphthong in Chinese Korean."
This study examines how Mandarin falling sonority diphthongs are adapted to a Chinese Korean dialect. It investigates how the subtle phonetic conditions of the source language affect adaptation, and if and how those phonetic effects differ in established loanwords compared to the on-line adaptation of novel loan forms. We found that in this bilingual population, while the Mandarin diphthongs are usually adapted as monophthongs, obeying the native phonological restriction against falling diphthongs, the retention of the input diphthongs in violation of the native constraint is also quite common. Additionally, we found that the choice of the monophthong vs. diphthong realization is strongly affected by the input phonetic duration and in particular, the durational difference among the different tones is robustly reflected in the adaptation patterns.
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