• Title/Summary/Keyword: Native Speaker

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Effects of Korean Syllable Structure on English Pronunciation

  • Lee, Mi-Hyun;Ryu, Hee-Kwan
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2000.07a
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    • pp.364-364
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    • 2000
  • It has been widely discussed in phonology that syllable structure of mother tongue influences one's acquisition of foreign language. However, the topic was hardly examined experimentally. So, we investigated effects of Korean syllable structure when Korean speakers pronounce English words, especially focusing on consonant strings that are not allowed in Korean. In the experiment, all the subjects are divided into 3 groups, that is, native, experienced, and inexperienced speakers. Native group consists of 1 male English native speaker. Experienced and inexperienced are each composed of 3 male Korean speakers. These 2 groups are divided by the length of residence in the country using English as a native language. 41 mono-syllable words are prepared considering the position (onset vs. coda), characteristic (stops, affricates, fricatives), and number of consonant. Then, the length of the consonant cluster is measured. To eliminate tempo effect, the measured length is normalized using the length of the word 'say' in the carrier sentence. Measurement of consonant cluster is the relative time period between the initiation of energy (onset I coda) which is acoustically representative of noise (consonant portion) and voicing. bar (vowel portion) in a syllable. Statistical method is used to estimate the differences among 3 groups. For each word, analysis of variance (ANDY A) and Post Hoc tests are carried out.

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A Study on the Intonation Contours of Students' Groups by Oral Proficiency Level (말하기 숙달도에 따른 대학생 집단별 억양곡선 고찰)

  • Yang, Byung-Gon;Seo, Jun-Young
    • Speech Sciences
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    • v.14 no.3
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    • pp.77-89
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    • 2007
  • This paper examined the intonation contours of English sentences produced by the Korean students. Thirty students participated in the speaking tasks made up of three parts: an oral interview, picture description and a conversational text reading. Their pronunciations in the parts were recorded on a minidisk. Then, two native instructors evaluated their proficiency level focusing on general intelligibility and suprasegmental aspects of the speech. Based on the results of evaluation they were divided into two groups: high and low proficiency groups. The pitch contours of three sentences produced by both the Korean students and a native speaker were compared to find any similarities and differences in the students' intonation patterns using Praat. Results showed that there was a moderate correlation in the proficiency scores of the students by the two native speakers. Secondly, students who earned high scores in the proficiency level matched better the native model. Thirdly, the high group students knew more on the pitch contour and tried to carefully realize them while fewer students in the low group answered positively on the questionnaire. In conclusion, English learners need to know the proper intonation patterns and to practice them consciously and sufficiently to realize correct intonation contours. Further studies would be desirable on the students' pronunciation focused on discourse structure.

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A Comparison of Native and Narrative English Speakers' Complaints (한국인 영어 학습자와 영어 모국어 화자의 불평 발화 행위 비교 연구)

  • Jung, Euen Hyuk(Sarah);Ahn, Kyung-min
    • Journal of English Language & Literature
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    • v.53 no.2
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    • pp.335-357
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    • 2007
  • This study aims to investigate the pragmatic features of Korean EFL learners' interlanguage in the communicative act of complaining. Since a complaint, by its nature, is likely to cause offence, thereby threatening the social relationship between the speaker and the hearer, making a complaint in a polite manner is of crucial importance in maintaining harmonious social relationships. However, very little research has been carried out on the complaint speech act performances of Korean EFL learners. In particular, studies which attempt to examine the effect of social status on the choice of complaint speech act strategies are rare. The present study compared the complaint speech act performances of Korean EFL learners and those of native speakers of English with respect to social status. 24 Korean EFL learners and 28 native speakers of English participated and the data were collected via a Discourse Completion Test. The findings revealed that Korean EFL learners differed from native English speakers in the use of complaint strategies. These results indicate that Korean EFL learners lack certain important skills necessary to make complaints appropriately, suggesting the need for the foreign language learners to develop a more extensive pragmatic knowledge of complaint strategies.

The Electropalatographic Evidence of the Korean Flap: An Intervocalic Korean Liquid Sound

  • Ahn, Soo-Woong
    • Speech Sciences
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    • v.9 no.3
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    • pp.155-168
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    • 2002
  • The intervocalic Korean liquid sound has been recognized as a flap in the studies of the Korean language. But there has been very little experimental data corroborating it. The electropalatographic (EPG) experiment was conducted to test this. The subjects were one Korean speaker and one native English speaker who had a pseudopalate and did the EPG experiment at the UCLA phonetics laboratory. The spectrographic evidence of the flaps in both the English t-flap and the Korean liquid flap was also sought. The English and Korean flaps were between mid/low back vowels so that the vowels themselves would not affect palatal contacts of the tongue. The results confirmed that the Korean liquid is realized as a flap in intervocallical position with many similar properties to English flap in both EPG and spectrographic data. The Korean initial liquid sound in borrowed words such as 'rotary' and 'radio' was also a flap. But the Korean liquid in the word-final and geminate positions was a lateral as in words 'dol ' (stone), 'dollo' (with stone), 'nal' (day) and 'nallara' (carry). The intuitive theory of the Korean liquid flap was proved by the EPG and spectrographic data.

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Performance Evaluation of English Word Pronunciation Correction System (한국인을 위한 외국어 발음 교정 시스템의 개발 및 성능 평가)

  • Kim Mu Jung;Kim Hyo Sook;Kim Sun Ju;Kim Byoung Gi;Ha Jin-Young;Kwon Chul Hong
    • MALSORI
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    • no.46
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    • pp.87-102
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    • 2003
  • In this paper, we present an English pronunciation correction system for Korean speakers and show some of experimental results on it. The aim of the system is to detect mispronounced phonemes in spoken words and to give appropriate correction comments to users. There are several English pronunciation correction systems adopting speech recognition technology, however, most of them use conventional speech recognition engines. From this reason, they could not give phoneme based correction comments to users. In our system, we build two kinds of phoneme models: standard native speaker models and Korean's error models. We also design recognition network based on phonemes to detect Koreans' common mispronunciations. We get 90% detection rate in insertion/deletion/replacement of phonemes, but we cannot get high detection rate in diphthong split and accents.

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A Cross-Language Comparison of Speaking Rate Effects on the Production and Perception of English Word-final Stops

  • Kang, Seok-Han
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2007.05a
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    • pp.285-287
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    • 2007
  • The primary goal of this study is to find out how the effect of speaking rate has some influence on the production and perception across languages. Through both experiments of production and perception, an English native speaker changes both production and perception simultaneously. Especially the production of the temporal features changes relatively fast. On the contrary, Chinese and Korean speakers changes their production rather than perception by following the speaking rate.

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Using Corpora for the Study of Word-Formation: A Case Study in English Negative Prefixation

  • Kwon, Heok-Seung
    • Korean Journal of English Language and Linguistics
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    • v.1 no.3
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    • pp.369-386
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    • 2001
  • This paper will show that traditional approaches to the derivation of different negative words have been of an essentially hypothetical nature, based on either linguists' intuitions or rather scant evidence, and that native-speaker dictionary entries show meaning potentials (rather than meanings) which are in fact linguistic and cognitive prototypes. The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that using a large corpus of natural language can provide better answers to questions about word-formation (i.e., with particular reference to negative prefixation) than any other source of information.

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The Type of English Writing Error of Korean Undergraduate Students (한국 대학생이 보이는 영어작문 실수 유형)

  • Lim Heesuck;Park Chongwon;Nam Kichun
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2003.05a
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    • pp.176-179
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    • 2003
  • This study was conducted to extract the feature set of English writing error for suggesting adequate English writing program and making automated scoring system. The frequent committed error and the error across the level of writing proficiency were reported. Also, It is reported that the correlation between type of error and native speaker's rating score.

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A Path to Speaking Excellence: Exploring Causes and Effects among Speaking Barriers

  • Park, Chong-Won
    • English Language & Literature Teaching
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.87-110
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    • 2007
  • Past studies conducted on the students' verbal participation both in and out of class have explored and identified variables affecting the process of learning to speak English. However, little is known about the causes and effects of these variables. A survey form developed from a previous study was administered to 468 university students taking English conversation classes from native speakers of English. To better understand the causes and effects of speaking barriers, path analysis was administered as the main tool of investigation. The results of the study indicate that familiarities toward NS (Native Speaker) teachers, learner faithfulness, che-myon, NS teachers' classroom management skills, and NS teacher's trustworthiness account for 50.72% of speaking grades. These factors are causally related to learner attitudes. However, with regard to speaking grades, all of the above factors except che-myon are also causally related with each other. Therefore, it was concluded that learner attitudes can be improved by minimizing che-myon, however, che-myon itself cannot be a predictor of speaking grades. To validate the findings of the study, related research work is discussed and implications are provided.

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Aspects of Prosodic Phrases' Formation Produced by Chinese Speakers in the Reading of Korean Text (낭독체에 나타난 중국인 학습자들의 운율구 실현 양상 -청취실험을 바탕으로-)

  • Yune, Young-Sook
    • Speech Sciences
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    • v.15 no.4
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    • pp.29-41
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    • 2008
  • The purpose of this paper is to examine how Chinese speakers realize Korean prosodic phrases in the reading of Korean texts. Prosodic phrase, in this study, is defined as basic unit of spoken language which can be perceived as purely separate phonetic unit by both hearer and speaker, and is realized with a coherent intonational configuration. Prosodic phrase plays an important role in both speech production and perception. In the second language acquisition, prosody influences the accuracy and fluency of spoken language. The main purpose of this study is to describe the aspect of syntagmatic operation of prosody that produces prosodic phrases. We have specifically examined the relations between the prosodic phrase's boundary and its syntactic status. Furthermore, we examined internal syntactic structure of each prosodic phrase. And the results of each analysis were compared to the aspects of prosodic phrases' formation produced by native Korean speakers. The results show that Chinese speakers tend to coincide the prosodic phrases with syntactic structure more than native Korean speakers.

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