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KMID : 1022420100020020003
Phonetics and Speech Sciences
2010 Volume.2 No. 2 p.3 ~ p.16
Contrastive Analysis of Mongolian and Korean Monophthongs Based on Acoustic Experiment
Yi Joong-Jin

Abstract
This study aims at setting the hierarchy of difficulty of the 7 Korean monophthongs for Mongolian learners of Korean according to Prator¡¯s theory based on the Contrastive Analysis Hypothesis. In addition to that, it will be shown that the difficulties and errors for Mongolian learners of Korean as a second or foreign language proceed directly from this hierarchy of difficulty. This study began by looking at the speeches of 60 Mongolians for Mongolian monophthongs; data were investigated and analyzed into formant frequencies F1 and F2 of each vowel. Then, the 7 Korean monophthongs were compared with the resultant Mongolian formant values and are assigned to 3 levels, ¡®same¡¯, ¡®similar¡¯ or ¡®different sound¡¯. The findings in assessing the differences of the 8 nearest equivalents of Korean and Mongolian vowels are as follows: First, Korean /a/ and /?/ turned out as a ¡®same sound¡¯ with their counterparts, Mongolian /a/ and /?/. Second, Korean /i/, /e/, /o/, /u/ turned out as a ¡®similar sound¡¯ with each their Mongolian counterparts /i/, /e/, /o/, /u/. Third, Korean /?/ which is nearest to Mongolian /i/ in terms of phonetic features seriously differs from it and is thus assigned to ¡®different sound¡¯. And lastly, Mongolian /?/ turned out as a ¡®different sound¡¯ with its nearest counterpart, Korean /u/. Based on these findings the hierarchy of difficulty was constructed. Firstly, 4 Korean monophthongs /a/, /?/, /i/, /e/ would be Level 0(Transfer); they would be transferred positively from their Mongolian counterparts when Mongolians learn Korean. Secondly, Korean /o/, /u/ would be Level 5(Split); they would require the Mongolian learner to make a new distinction and cause interference in learning the Korean language because Mongolian /o/, /u/ each have 2 similar counterpart sounds; Korean /o, u/, /u, o/. Thirdly, Korean /?/ which is not in the Mongolian vowel system will be Level 4(Overdifferentiation); the new vowel /?;/ which bears little similarity to Mongolian /i/, must be learned entirely anew and will cause much difficulty for Mongolian learners in speaking and writing Korean. And lastly, Mongolian /?/ will be Level 2(Underdifferentiation); it is absent in the Korean language and doesn¡¯t cause interference in learning Korean as long as Mongolian learners avoid using it.
KEYWORD
Contrastive analysis hypothesis, hierarchy of difficulty, interference, Mongolian monophthongs
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