Amanote Research

Amanote Research

    RegisterSign In

The Effect of L1 Use on Pronunciation in Quichua–Spanish Bilinguals

Journal of Phonetics - United States
doi 10.1006/jpho.2000.0104
Full Text
Open PDF
Abstract

Available in full text

Categories
LinguisticsSpeechLanguageHearing
Date

January 1, 2000

Authors
Susan G. GuionJames E. FlegeJonathan D. Loftin
Publisher

Elsevier BV


Related search

Cognate Effect and Lexical Processing in English-Spanish and Spanish-English Bilinguals

Latin American Journal of Content & Language Integrated Learning
2016English

Effects of L1 Orthography and L1 Phonology on L2 English Pronunciation

Revue Francaise de Linguistique Appliquee
LinguisticsLanguage
2018English

Lexical Access in English-Spanish Bilinguals

Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism
LinguisticsLanguage
2018English

The Impact of a Subordinate L1 on L2 Auditory Processing in Adult Bilinguals

Bilingualism
LinguisticsEducationLanguage
2010English

Questionnaire-Based Pronunciation Studies: Italian, Spanish and Polish Students’ Views on Their English Pronunciation

Research in Language
LinguisticsLanguage
2012English

On the Effects of L2 Perception and of Individual Differences in L1 Production on L2 Pronunciation

Frontiers in Psychology
Psychology
2014English

The Effect of Script Similarity on Executive Control in Bilinguals

Frontiers in Psychology
Psychology
2014English

The Acquisition of Gender Agreement in L3 English by Basque/Spanish Bilinguals

2011English

Working Memory in Spanish–English and Chinese–English Bilinguals

Psychology and Behavioral Sciences
2016English

Amanote Research

Note-taking for researchers

Follow Amanote

© 2025 Amaplex Software S.P.R.L. All rights reserved.

Privacy PolicyRefund Policy