ELOPE (Dec 2021)

Attitudes toward Jordanian Arabic-Accented English among Native and Non-native Speakers of English

  • Mohammed Nour Abu Guba,
  • Bassil Mashaqba,
  • Anas Huneety,
  • Omer AlHajEid

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4312/elope.18.2.9-29
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 2

Abstract

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This paper explores attitudes toward Jordanian Arabic-accented English among native and non-native speakers of English. Three groups of listeners (native English speakers, Jordanian Arab specialists and non-specialists in English) were asked to rate three groups of speakers (a group of native English speakers and two groups of Jordanian Arabic bilinguals) reading a short story in English on the degree of foreign accentedness, friendliness, pleasantness and clarity. The results showed that the Jordanian Arabic speakers, especially those with a lower level of English, were perceived less favourably than the native speakers. Furthermore, the English native listeners generally had more favourable perceptions than the non-native listeners with regard to the non-native speakers. The degree of foreign-accentedness was highly correlated with attitudes toward non-native speakers, especially among the non-native speakers themselves. The results confirm that a native English accent is preferred over non-native accents.

Keywords