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La perception du français oral par des apprenants suédois / Svenska inlärares perception av talad franska

<p>Swedish learners of French often experience large difficulties in understanding spoken French. Words that the learners know very well when written or when pronounced separately are often hard to recognize in the speech flow. The aim of this study is to examine Swedish learners’ perception of French speech in order to identify the problems.</p><p>The thesis consists of two parts. The first part provides an introduction to the perception of a second language. It also describes the phonological structures of Swedish and French and gives an overview of studies of the perception of spoken French.</p><p>The second part of the thesis contains a presentation and an analysis of four perception experiments conducted with Swedish learners of French. The results show that the learners often confuse phonological contrasts that do not exist in Swedish. It is furthermore found that the phonological processes of <i>schwa deletion</i>, <i>liaison</i>, <i>enchaînement</i> and <i>voicing assimilation</i> contribute to the perception problems. However, although <i>liaison</i> may complicate word recognition the results indicate that the so-called <i>potential liaison</i> does so to an even greater extent. In a listening test using nonsense words, the learners seem actually to expect liaison when perceiving a word that can be linked to a following nonsense word. In fact, sequences like <i>un navas</i> and <i>un avas</i> are both perceived as <i>un avas</i>. Paradoxically, liaison thus seems to be most problematic when it does not occur.</p><p>As to schwa deletion, the results show that word recognition is delayed when the schwa in the first syllable is deleted, as in <i>la s’maine</i>. In addition, the learners make a large number of errors due to schwa deletion. This phonological process sometimes completely prevents word recognition, especially when combined with a voicing assimilation. Schwa deletion thus seems to strongly complicate Swedish learners’ word recognition in spoken French.</p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UPSALLA/oai:DiVA.org:umu-524
Date January 2005
CreatorsStridfeldt, Monika
PublisherUmeå University, Modern Languages, Umeå : Moderna språk
Source SetsDiVA Archive at Upsalla University
LanguageFrench
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDoctoral thesis, monograph, text
RelationSkrifter från moderna språk, 1650-304X ; 19

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