A study of acrolectal Malaysian English pronunciation / Devan Gunaseelan

Most descriptions of Malaysian English (MalE) pronunciations focus on the colloquial and learner varieties. One of the reasons for this is the assumptions that MalE refers to the localised and more colloquial variety. The other is the assumption that the standard variety of MalE is similar to Standa...

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Main Author: Devan, Gunaseelan
Format: Thesis
Published: 2018
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Online Access:http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9675/1/Devan_Gunaseelan.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9675/6/devan.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9675/
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spelling my.um.stud.96752021-02-02T17:43:54Z A study of acrolectal Malaysian English pronunciation / Devan Gunaseelan Devan, Gunaseelan P Philology. Linguistics Most descriptions of Malaysian English (MalE) pronunciations focus on the colloquial and learner varieties. One of the reasons for this is the assumptions that MalE refers to the localised and more colloquial variety. The other is the assumption that the standard variety of MalE is similar to Standard British English (SBE). Whilst this may be true of the written standard variety, it is unlikely Malaysian speakers sound like SBE speakers or speak with a Received Pronunciation (RP) accent. However, there is a lack of research published in the area pertaining in the spoken variety of acrolectal MalE. One of the implications of this gap is the deference to RP as a reference point. To address this gap the current study sets out to identify the features of vowels and consonants in the acrolectal variety of MalE through an analysis of the pronunciations of Malaysian newscasters. The main reason for selecting broadcast English for this research is that we would expect the acrolectal variety of English to be used in this context. Extracts from ten newscasters, from two Malaysian English news channels were selected for the research. Perceptual analysis was supplemented by acoustic analysis of the sounds where relevant. The results indicate that the pronunciation of acrolectal MalE exhibits limited similarities to the spoken colloquial variety of MalE particularly in relation to the initial th stopping, a lack of vowel contrast and the realisation of some diphthongs as monophthongs. In conclusion, the acrolectal MalE is not similar to BrE, as previously maintained, and it is also not similar to the colloquial variety or learner variety which tends to have more marked pronunciation features. 2018-09 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9675/1/Devan_Gunaseelan.pdf application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9675/6/devan.pdf Devan, Gunaseelan (2018) A study of acrolectal Malaysian English pronunciation / Devan Gunaseelan. Masters thesis, University of Malaya. http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9675/
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Student Repository
url_provider http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/
topic P Philology. Linguistics
spellingShingle P Philology. Linguistics
Devan, Gunaseelan
A study of acrolectal Malaysian English pronunciation / Devan Gunaseelan
description Most descriptions of Malaysian English (MalE) pronunciations focus on the colloquial and learner varieties. One of the reasons for this is the assumptions that MalE refers to the localised and more colloquial variety. The other is the assumption that the standard variety of MalE is similar to Standard British English (SBE). Whilst this may be true of the written standard variety, it is unlikely Malaysian speakers sound like SBE speakers or speak with a Received Pronunciation (RP) accent. However, there is a lack of research published in the area pertaining in the spoken variety of acrolectal MalE. One of the implications of this gap is the deference to RP as a reference point. To address this gap the current study sets out to identify the features of vowels and consonants in the acrolectal variety of MalE through an analysis of the pronunciations of Malaysian newscasters. The main reason for selecting broadcast English for this research is that we would expect the acrolectal variety of English to be used in this context. Extracts from ten newscasters, from two Malaysian English news channels were selected for the research. Perceptual analysis was supplemented by acoustic analysis of the sounds where relevant. The results indicate that the pronunciation of acrolectal MalE exhibits limited similarities to the spoken colloquial variety of MalE particularly in relation to the initial th stopping, a lack of vowel contrast and the realisation of some diphthongs as monophthongs. In conclusion, the acrolectal MalE is not similar to BrE, as previously maintained, and it is also not similar to the colloquial variety or learner variety which tends to have more marked pronunciation features.
format Thesis
author Devan, Gunaseelan
author_facet Devan, Gunaseelan
author_sort Devan, Gunaseelan
title A study of acrolectal Malaysian English pronunciation / Devan Gunaseelan
title_short A study of acrolectal Malaysian English pronunciation / Devan Gunaseelan
title_full A study of acrolectal Malaysian English pronunciation / Devan Gunaseelan
title_fullStr A study of acrolectal Malaysian English pronunciation / Devan Gunaseelan
title_full_unstemmed A study of acrolectal Malaysian English pronunciation / Devan Gunaseelan
title_sort study of acrolectal malaysian english pronunciation / devan gunaseelan
publishDate 2018
url http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9675/1/Devan_Gunaseelan.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9675/6/devan.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9675/
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score 13.18916