Attractive as might seem the challenge to build a process or performance
model that can account for every behavioural decision, there are a number
of sound reasons to tackle first the still difficult (but hopefully manageable)
task of developing a competence model; of trying to find the underlying
system that informs and constrains (if it doesn't always actually
govern)
choice. (Spolsky 1988: 105)
This article aims at showing the predictability of phonological adaptation,
segment
preservation and deletion in borrowings. It is shown that ill-formed segments
are
preserved and adapted in the vast majority of cases; segment deletion occurs
only
when an ill-formed segment is embedded within a higher level ill-formed
structure,
such as the syllable. This conclusion is based on the study of 15,686 segmental
and
syllabic malformations found in 11,348 loanword forms from five different
corpora
of loanwords. The analysis, which is set within the Theory of Constraints
and Repair
Strategies, is illustrated with the data from a corpus of 545 French loanwords
in Fula.