When in doubt, glottal stop: A Mandarin-speaking three-year-old with protracted phonological development

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Abstract

As part of a special issue on case profiles in protracted phonological development (PPD), we present a Mandarin-speaking three-year-old boy from Shanghai with severe PPD and no other developmental concerns. In comparison with typically developing (TD) children and a peer group from Shanghai with PPD, he had a very low Whole Word Match score (3.7% of words matched the adult targets exactly), reflecting severe constraints on word structure, consonants and diphthongs/triphthongs. His phonological output resembled that of younger children in its absence of fricatives, liquids and diphthongs/triphthongs alongside fairly high match for word length, tones and monophthongs, labials /p/ and /m/ and dorsal /k/. However, less expected was a pervasive glottal stop substitution in onset. The analysis describes his needs in detail but also strengths that could be exploited in phonological intervention.

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Bernhardt, B. M., Liu, C., & Zhao, J. (2022). When in doubt, glottal stop: A Mandarin-speaking three-year-old with protracted phonological development. Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics, 36(8), 683–695. https://doi.org/10.1080/02699206.2021.1996632

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