This study examined the phonological intuitions of adults by having them rate the phonological "goodness" of nonsense words. Subjects were asked to use a ten point scale to rate how "English-like" each stimulus, which was presented auditorily, sounded. The stimuli were phonotactically legal (in English) bisyllabic, CVCCVC nonsense words that varied in their phonotactic probability and primary stress placement. Subjects rated highly probable phonotactic stimuli as more "English-like". In addition, stimuli with the primary stress on the first syllable were judged more "English-like" than stimuli with the primary stress on the second syllable. No interaction between phonotactic probability and stress was found. Our results show that subjects have consistent and reliable intuitions regarding phonotactic configurations and stress patterning, demonstrating that fairly detailed probabilistic segmental and suprasegmental information resides in memory for form-based lexical representations.
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