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Phonic interference may be due to factors on four levels:
I. Properly PHONIC FACTORS. [...]
II. EXTRA-PHONIC FACTORS [...]
III. EXTRA-LINGUISTIC FACTORS. These comprise the motivations for achieving intelligible, acceptable, or even native-like speech that are present in a concrete speech situation or in the general sociocultural setting in which the language contact takes place. [Weinreich, U., 1967, Languages in Contact. Findings and Problems, Columbia University, Mouton & Co., ยง 1.3, pp. 25, 67, and chapters 3 and 4.]
IV. [...] we may also expect a residue of ERRATIC CASES of interference [...]. - Weinreich (1957), a pag.2-3
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