Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-tsvsl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-29T10:16:11.599Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Misarticulations of Two Jordanian Children*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2009

Fares Mitleb
Affiliation:
Department of English, Yarmouk University, Irbid, Jordan

Extract

This paper examines the speech of two functionally misarticulating Jordanian children and illustrates the variability of misarticulation patterns as well as the failure of markedness to account for them. The presentation is very similar to work by Gierut describing misarticulating English-learning children (Gierut 1984, 1985), but in this case the children are learning Arabic. The term ‘functional misarticulation’ is typically used to describe the speech of speakers whose chronic articulatory errors cannot be attributed to any obvious organic disorder such as hearing impairment or cleft palate (Ingram 1976, Compton 1970). The basic assumption of much of the work done on speech misarticulations is that children's knowledge is identical to that of the ambient speech community (Compton 1975, Lorentz 1976). Within this framework, misarticulators are viewed as a homogenous group. Any discrepancy between the misarticulators' system and the ambient system is described as a ‘process’ (Shriberg & Kwiatkowski 1982). However, the many diverse phonological rules that have been posited to derive the misarticulators' surface structure from underlying structure make it difficult to arrive at any but gross commonalities across functional misarticulation systems (Ingram 1976). Such an assumption is a clear misrepresentation of the apparent differences across the misarticulation systems (Dinnsen, Elbert & Weismer 1980).

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Journal of the International Phonetic Association 1991

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Compton, A. (1970). Generative studies of children's phonological disorders. Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders 35, 315–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Compton, A. (1975). Generative studies of childrens' phonological disorders: A strategy of therapy. In Singh, S., (editor), Measurements in Hearing, Speech and Language. Baltimore: University Park Press, 5590.Google Scholar
Connell, P. (1982). Markedness differences in the substitutions of normal and misarticulating children. Paper presented at the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association Convention. Toronto, Canada.Google Scholar
Dinnsen, D.A and Eckman, F. (1975). A functional explanation of some phonological typologies. In Grassman, R. et al. (editors), Functionalism. Chicago: Chicago Linguistics Society, 126134.Google Scholar
Dinnsen, D.A. and Elbert, M. (1984). On the relationship between phonology and learning. In Elbert, M, Dinnsen, D.A. and Weismer, G. (editors), Phonological Theory and the Misarticulating Child (American Speech-Language-Hearing Association Monograph 22. Washington, D.C.), 5968Google Scholar
Dinnsen, D.A., Elbert, M. and Weismer, G. (1980). Some typological properties of functional misarticulation systems. In Dressler, W.O (editor) Phonologica. 1980. Innsbrück: Innsbrücker Beiträge zur Spachwissenschaft, 123–8.Google Scholar
Ingram, D. (1976). Phonological Disability in Children. New York: Elsevier.Google Scholar
Gierut, J.A. (1984). A further characterization of functionally misarticulated speech. Research in Phonetics (Indiana University) 4, 176196.Google Scholar
Gierut, J.A. (1985). Generative phonology: Clinical applications in speech pathology. Innovations in Linguistics Education 3:2, 153–67.Google Scholar
Lorentz, J.P. (1976). An Analysis of Some Deviant Phonological Rules. In Morehead, B.M. and Morehead, A.M. (editors), Normal and Deficient Language. Baltimore: University Park Press, 2959.Google Scholar
Mitleb, F. (1987). Generative accounts of misarticulated speech. Arab Journal for the Humanities Issue 26, Volume 7, Kuwait University.Google Scholar
Mitleb, F. (1987). Speech Misarticulations. Kuwait: Kuwait Society for the Advancement of Arab Children.Google Scholar
Shriberg, L.D. and Kwiatowski, J. (1982). Phonological disorders: A diagnostic classification system. Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders 47, 226–41.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed