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학습자의 발화 속도 변이 연구: 일본인과 중국인 한국어 학습자와 한국어 모어 화자 비교A Comparative Study on Speech Rate Variation between Japanese/Chinese Learners of Korean and Native Korean

Other Titles
A Comparative Study on Speech Rate Variation between Japanese/Chinese Learners of Korean and Native Korean
Authors
김미란강현주노주현
Issue Date
2014
Publisher
한국어학회
Keywords
speech rate; speech rate variation; suprasegmentals; teaching pronunciation; fluency; Chinese learners of Korean; Japanese learners of Korean; 발화 속도; 발화 속도 변이; 초분절소; 발음 교육; 유창성; 중국인 한국어 학습자; 일본인 한국어 학습자
Citation
한국어학, v.63, pp.103 - 132
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
한국어학
Volume
63
Start Page
103
End Page
132
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/100386
ISSN
1226-9123
Abstract
This study compares various speech rates of Korean learners with those of native Korean. Speech data were collected from 34 native Koreans and 33 Korean learners (19 Chinese and 14 Japanese). Each participant recorded a 9 syllabled Korean sentence at three different speech rate types. A total of 603 speech samples were analyzed by speech rate types (normal, slow, and fast), native languages (Korean, Chinese, Japanese), and learners’ proficiency levels (beginner, intermediate, and advanced). We found that learners’ L1 background plays a role in categorizing different speech rates in the L2 (Korean), and also that the leaners’ proficiency correlates with the increase of speaking rate regardless of speech rate categories. More importantly, faster speech rate values found in the advanced level of learners do not necessarily match to the native speakers' speech rate categories. This means that learning speech rate categories can be more complex than we think of proficiency or fluency. That is, speech rate categories may not be acquired automatically during the course of second language learning, and implicit or explicit exposures to various rate types are necessary for second language learners to acquire a high level of communicative skills including speech rate variation. This paper discusses several pedagogical implications in terms of teaching pronunciation to second language learners.
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