Title
The Hong Kong English accent : variation and acceptability
Document Type
Journal article
Source Publication
Hong Kong Journal of Applied Linguistics
Publication Date
2-1-2012
Volume
13
Issue
2
First Page
1
Last Page
21
Abstract
Most studies of attitudes towards the Hong Kong English accent have concluded that Hong Kong has a strongly exonormative orientation, with no sign of endonormative stabilisation (see, for example, Luk, 2010). This paper contends that these findings are partly a result of a varieties-based approach to Hong Kong English, which tends to neglect the considerable variation in feature use that exists between speakers. As a complementary perspective, this paper outlines a features-based approach which acknowledges this variation. The results of an accent survey involving 12 local accents and 52 local listeners are presented, and the findings are discussed with reference to variational patterns in the use of features. The results indicate that the phonological features of accents are important determinants of listener responses, and suggest that Hong Kong English accents may be acceptable for pedagogical purposes if they do not contain certain salient features. An apparent correspondence between the acceptability and intelligibility characteristics of features is noted and tentatively explained using the concept of salience. The implications of the study's findings for issues such as variety status, the distinction between variants and errors, and pedagogy, are also considered.
Print ISSN
10284435
E-ISSN
10152059
Publisher Statement
Copyright © 2012 Centre for Applied English Studies, The University of Hong Kong
Language
English
Recommended Citation
Sewell, A. (2012). The Hong Kong English accent: Variation and acceptability. Hong Kong Journal of Applied Linguistics, 13(2), 1-21.