In spite of a powerful preference for bisyllabicity identified in previous research on loanword truncation in Cantonese, more
new forms are increasingly found which have been truncated down to a monosyllable. An examination of a 1,400-word corpus of
Cantonese loanwords collected over a span of 50 years reveals a significant increase in the number of loan verbs and adjectives
in more recent times, as opposed to the almost exclusive adoption of nouns previously. Verbs, as opposed to nouns, are found
to be much more prone to undergoing “monosyllabic truncation.” This is found to stem from an asymmetry between nouns and verbs
in the native language. A preference for monosyllabicity, particularly in the case of verbs and adjectives, is confirmed via
a study of a Cantonese translation of the Swadesh word list. A further investigation of a corpus of everyday conversations
uncovers lexical statistics that may have been mirrored in the truncation process. Finally, the greater readiness for the
importation of verbs in more recent times is explained in terms of Haugen’s “stages of bilingualism.”
Keywords Loanword phonology - Truncation - Cantonese - Word length - Noun–verb asymmetry