Accentedness Isn’T Abnormal Speech; It’S a Badge of Identity

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Language Arts
Cover of the book Accentedness Isn’T Abnormal Speech; It’S a Badge of Identity by Naphtali M. W. Makora, Xlibris US
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Naphtali M. W. Makora ISBN: 9781493164608
Publisher: Xlibris US Publication: February 17, 2014
Imprint: Xlibris US Language: English
Author: Naphtali M. W. Makora
ISBN: 9781493164608
Publisher: Xlibris US
Publication: February 17, 2014
Imprint: Xlibris US
Language: English

This research is on foreign accents. The researcher-authora non-native fluent English speaker discovered through a lit-review that all people speak in accent. This research focused on attitudinal self-accented speech perceptions of Kisii-Kenyans in the USA and further investigated what North American English (NAE) speakers perceptions are toward the Kisii-Kenyan accentedness. Two groups participated in this study. First, college educated Kisii-Kenyan adults, and second, NAE speakers participated in the study. A likert scale type of questionnaire was used to collect data from the first group and was analyzed for result. The second group listened to speech clips from two Kisii-Kenyan volunteers and hence assessed their accentedness and intelligibility. The findings revealed Kisii-Kenyans perceptions of themselves as confident and positive in their accented English speech. On the American perceptions it is not conclusive, and the assessments do not reveal any validity of judging Kisii-Kenyans as incomprehensible and unintelligible.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

This research is on foreign accents. The researcher-authora non-native fluent English speaker discovered through a lit-review that all people speak in accent. This research focused on attitudinal self-accented speech perceptions of Kisii-Kenyans in the USA and further investigated what North American English (NAE) speakers perceptions are toward the Kisii-Kenyan accentedness. Two groups participated in this study. First, college educated Kisii-Kenyan adults, and second, NAE speakers participated in the study. A likert scale type of questionnaire was used to collect data from the first group and was analyzed for result. The second group listened to speech clips from two Kisii-Kenyan volunteers and hence assessed their accentedness and intelligibility. The findings revealed Kisii-Kenyans perceptions of themselves as confident and positive in their accented English speech. On the American perceptions it is not conclusive, and the assessments do not reveal any validity of judging Kisii-Kenyans as incomprehensible and unintelligible.

More books from Xlibris US

Cover of the book The Jackson Heights Project: the Devastation of an Innocent Family by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book African Animals A-Z by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book Phil's Book of Poems of Love and Inspiration by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book Free to Live, Free to Love by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book Carmelita De Andalucia by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book My Personal Crusade by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book Messenger of Death by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book September Song by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book The Romance Game Played and Lost by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book Sophie . . . Best Friends Are Forever by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book Dogma by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book Vacationing on Planet Xanax by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book Angry Tears by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book Plucked out of the Fire! by Naphtali M. W. Makora
Cover of the book The Art of Burglarizing Your Home by Naphtali M. W. Makora
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy