John Benjamins Publishing Company
Chapter 3. The second language acquisition of variation in adulthood and language change
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Abstract
Research on the second language acquisition of sociolinguistic variation is grounded in an understanding of sociohistorical linguistics. The patterns attested in language change provide a foundation for understanding the language of second language learners. This chapter provides an overview of research on adult L2 sociolinguistics and shines a light on studies that demonstrate how linguists might bridge the gap between the fields of historical linguistics and second language acquisition (e.g., Giacalone Ramat (1995) for L2 Italian, Donaldson (2017) for L2 French and Geeslin (2002) for L2 Spanish). Moving from studies that explicitly explore this connection, the chapter identifies other findings in L2 research that bridge this gap, and offers suggestions for future inquiry at the intersection of these two fields.
Abstract
Research on the second language acquisition of sociolinguistic variation is grounded in an understanding of sociohistorical linguistics. The patterns attested in language change provide a foundation for understanding the language of second language learners. This chapter provides an overview of research on adult L2 sociolinguistics and shines a light on studies that demonstrate how linguists might bridge the gap between the fields of historical linguistics and second language acquisition (e.g., Giacalone Ramat (1995) for L2 Italian, Donaldson (2017) for L2 French and Geeslin (2002) for L2 Spanish). Moving from studies that explicitly explore this connection, the chapter identifies other findings in L2 research that bridge this gap, and offers suggestions for future inquiry at the intersection of these two fields.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents vii
- Acknowledgements ix
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Part I. Introduction
- Chapter 1. Language acquisition across the lifespan in historical sociolinguistics 2
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Part II. Perspectives on acquisition and change
- Chapter 2. Monolingual and bilingual child language acquisition and language change 44
- Chapter 3. The second language acquisition of variation in adulthood and language change 64
- Chapter 4. The dynamics of lifelong acquisition in dialect contact and change 84
- Chapter 5. Multilingual acquisition across the lifespan as a sociohistorical trigger for language change 104
- Chapter 6. Language acquisition across the lifespan and the emergence of new varieties 127
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Part III. Case studies
- Chapter 7. Tracing the emergence of the voseo/tuteo semantic split in Río de la Plata second person subjunctives 150
- Chapter 8. The influences of adult and child speakers in the emergence of Light Warlpiri, an Australian mixed language 179
- Chapter 9. Child and adolescent transmission and incrementation in acquisition in historical sociophonetic data from English in Missouri, 1880–2000 203
- Chapter 10. Language dominance across the lifespan in Wisconsin German and English varieties 234
- Chapter 11. The contact origin(s) of ‘hand’ and ‘foot’ > ‘limb’ in Antioquian Spanish 264
- Chapter 12. Adult L2 acquisition of for- complementation in Chinese Pidgin English and Hong Kong English 294
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Part IV. Future directions
- Chapter 13. Towards an acquisitionally informed historical sociolinguistics 318
- Language index 327
- Subject index 331
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents vii
- Acknowledgements ix
-
Part I. Introduction
- Chapter 1. Language acquisition across the lifespan in historical sociolinguistics 2
-
Part II. Perspectives on acquisition and change
- Chapter 2. Monolingual and bilingual child language acquisition and language change 44
- Chapter 3. The second language acquisition of variation in adulthood and language change 64
- Chapter 4. The dynamics of lifelong acquisition in dialect contact and change 84
- Chapter 5. Multilingual acquisition across the lifespan as a sociohistorical trigger for language change 104
- Chapter 6. Language acquisition across the lifespan and the emergence of new varieties 127
-
Part III. Case studies
- Chapter 7. Tracing the emergence of the voseo/tuteo semantic split in Río de la Plata second person subjunctives 150
- Chapter 8. The influences of adult and child speakers in the emergence of Light Warlpiri, an Australian mixed language 179
- Chapter 9. Child and adolescent transmission and incrementation in acquisition in historical sociophonetic data from English in Missouri, 1880–2000 203
- Chapter 10. Language dominance across the lifespan in Wisconsin German and English varieties 234
- Chapter 11. The contact origin(s) of ‘hand’ and ‘foot’ > ‘limb’ in Antioquian Spanish 264
- Chapter 12. Adult L2 acquisition of for- complementation in Chinese Pidgin English and Hong Kong English 294
-
Part IV. Future directions
- Chapter 13. Towards an acquisitionally informed historical sociolinguistics 318
- Language index 327
- Subject index 331