The present study examined the pattern of deletion of final /t/
and /d/
in word final consonant clusters in sixteen three- and four-year-old
children and their degree of mastery of phonological and grammatical
constraints to answer the following questions: how and when is this
variable rule acquired, and how does its acquisition relate to the learning
of the categorical rule of past tense formation? Sixteen children were
tape recorded in their South Philadelphia day care centre. In addition,
eight of their mothers were interviewed in their homes for purposes of
comparison.
Results of the study revealed that children as young as three had, for
the most part, mastered the phonological constraints on (-t, d) deletion.
They matched the adult pattern including the constraint of following
pause disfavouring deletion, the only one that has been shown to vary
according to geographical dialect. The children also made a consistent
and adult-like distinction between the grammatical forms of monomorpheme
and weak past tense. Their high rate of deletion in semi-weak
verbs, which differs from adult patterns, suggests that the children are
demonstrating rule acquisition based on an analysis of verbal inflection.