Publication | Closed Access
Chinese Children's Use of Subcharacter Information About Pronunciation.
49
Citations
16
References
2005
Year
Second Language LearningLanguage DevelopmentPsycholinguisticsLanguage VariationLanguage LearningPhonologySecond Language AcquisitionPhoneticsChild LanguageLanguage AcquisitionLanguage StudiesChinese LanguageSubcharacter InformationHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceChinese 2NdSpeech ProductionEast Asian LanguagesPhonological AwarenessForeign Language LearningLanguage ComprehensionSpeech PerceptionCompound CharactersLinguistics
Two experiments involving Chinese 2nd graders and 4th graders investigated the use of subcharacter information to learn to pronounce unfamiliar semantic-phonetic compound characters. Experiment 1 confirmed that children can use the information in both tone-different and onset-different characters to learn character pronunciations and showed that phonological awareness generally facilitates learning. Experiment 2 demonstrated that children can utilize the information in bound-phonetic characters as well as, or even better than, the information in independent-phonetic characters, which implies that Chinese children can use an analogy strategy for decoding compound characters.
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