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    <depositor>
      <depositor_name>Ọbádélé B Kambon</depositor_name>
      <email_address>gjl@laghana.org</email_address>
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    <registrant>Linguistics Association of Ghana</registrant>
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        <full_title>Ghana Journal of Linguistics</full_title>
        <abbrev_title>GJL</abbrev_title>
        <issn media_type="electronic">2026-6596</issn>
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          <month>07</month>
          <day>31</day>
          <year>2024</year>
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          <volume>13</volume>
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        <issue>1</issue>
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          <doi>10.61307/gjl.v13i1</doi>
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          <title>DISAMBIGUATING THE DENTALISATION TAG ON PRE-DENTAL /T/ DELETION IN L2 ENGLISH</title>
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          <person_name contributor_role="author" sequence="first" language="en">
            <given_name>Amos Mivojour</given_name>
            <surname>Agboyinu</surname>
            <ORCID>https://orcid.org/0009-0002-3696-3477</ORCID>
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          <person_name contributor_role="author" sequence="additional" language="en">
            <given_name>Oluwasegun</given_name>
            <surname>Amoniyan</surname>
            <ORCID>https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6513-4681</ORCID>
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          <jats:p>While the phenomenon is described as /t/ deletion in some linguistic environments, its occurrence before the dental fricatives has been labelled dentalisation. This suggests that /t/ invariably acquires dental features when it occurs before a dental sound in a cluster. This assumption for pedagogy implies that learners of English are likely to get confused over a dentalised variant of pre-dental /t/ at the phonetic input. To dogmatically retain this description implies that just as the alveolar /n/ is realised as [ŋ] and /m/ before velar and labial sounds, there should be a dental variant of /t/ before a dental sound in clusters. This work examined the dentalised(/t/) in predentalised contexts. It was found that the speakers deleted pre-dental /t/, thus, indicating that /t/ has no dentalised variants but gets deleted in the pre-dental environment. We suggested imposing the term dentalisation on pre-dental /t/ should be reviewed in non-native environments.</jats:p>
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          <day>31</day>
          <year>2024</year>
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          <doi>10.61307/gjl.v13i1.635</doi>
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