Abstract Arabic emphatic consonants are claimed to be late-acquired, likely due to their motoric complexity, involving both coronal and pharyngeal/uvular constrictions. Children’s production has largely been studied using impressionistic data, with limited acoustic analysis. This study acoustically examines the acquisition of emphatic consonants in Saudi-Hijazi Arabic-speaking children aged 3–6 years. Thirty-eight children performed a real-word repetition task, after which consonantal and vocalic cues to the plain–emphatic contrast were measured. Results show that children produce both types of acoustic cues, with an age-related increase in the acoustic contrast and an overall alignment with adult patterns. Larger acoustic contrasts were found in vowels preceding rather than following consonants in word-medial positions, with no evidence for a difference between word-initial and word-final positions. The plain–emphatic contrast was greater for stops than fricatives and larger for female than male children. These findings are discussed in relation to the development of coarticulated consonants.
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Anwar Alkhudidi
Rebecca Holt
Tuende Szalay
Journal of Child Language
The University of Sydney
University of Amsterdam
UNSW Sydney
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Alkhudidi et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68bb4de86d6d5674bcd0198a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/s0305000925100214