[eng] This paper examines whether the production of English /ɜ:/ and /ʌ/ by Spanish-Majorcan
Catalan bilinguals is more accurate for those speakers dominant in Majorcan Catalan. It is
widely known that Both Spanish and Catalan lack stressed mid-central vowels in their repertory,
which makes it difficult for learners to attain them. However, the Balearic dialect does have
one, /ə/. For this reason, 14 Majorcan residents who were experienced students of English
enrolled in an English C1 level course were recorded reading 29 minimal pairs. These
participants had previously answered a language background questionnaire and the Bilingual
Language Profile questionnaire. Using the scores obtained in the latter, four groups were
established: Catalan dominant; slightly Spanish dominant; moderately Spanish dominant; and
clearly Spanish dominant. Then, by means of a Likert scale, their production was evaluated by
three native English speakers and a non-native speaker of English expert in phonetics. Results
evinced that there was no particular relation between dominance in Catalan and a better
performance in English mid-central vowels pronunciation. However, there were many
inconsistences in the production of these vowel sounds that might be attributed to the influence
of speakers’ L1 strict correlation between spelling and pronunciation, the consequences of the
rhotic quality of /ɜ:/ in the judges’ evaluation, the effect that minimal pair contrasts have on
production, and the impact of personal linguistic experiences.