Lectal acquisition and linguistic stereotype formation 251
Table 22. Exclusive linguistic differences when contrasted with default variety:
qualitative overview
Feature description And Gal Can Arg Mex Fra Ger BrE AmE
/r/ as uvular fricative
marked tone unit clause final 9
marked tone unit interrogative mood
/Ɵ/ as [s]
final and checked /s/ dropped
final /r/ dropped 9
intervocalic /s/ as marked aspiration 9
isolated vowel change (apatece)
final /l/ as [ł]
/r/ as back uvular 9
/y/ as [ʒ] or [ʃ] 9
/d/ as alveolar
marked tone unit exclamative mood 9
aspirated initial /t/ 9
vowel changes: close e/o, [æ] for [a] 9
Table 23. Exclusive linguistic differences when contrasted with default variety:
quantitative overview
Distinctive
features
Exclusive
features
Frequent
features
Linguistic
awareness
Social
awareness
Andalucía 4 1
Galicia 3 1
Canarias 4 1
Argentina 3 1
Mexico 2 1
France 4 1
Germany 3 0
Br. Eng. 4 1
Am. Eng. 3 1
Exclusiveness, then, does not explain the order of correct identification,
either. What the lack of exclusive features in the German speech fragment
might help to explain, though, is the fact that it is the only accent for which