Chapter 1. Acquisition of clitic climbing by European Portuguese children
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Maria Lobo
und Inês Vitorino
Abstract
This study investigates the acquisition of clitic climbing by European Portuguese speaking children considering spontaneous production data from three children aged 1;5 to 3;11 (Santos’ corpus: Santos et al., 2014) and data from an elicited production task administered to 64 children aged 5;2 to 8;2. The study shows that: clitic climbing is acquired early, as expected for a parametric property that is dependent on the specification of the functional domain; there is early sensitivity to properties of the adult grammar, although children take a while to determine which specific verbs allow or disallow clitic climbing. In optional contexts younger children prefer clitic climbing constructions over non-climbing constructions. We discuss these results in light of the notion of complexity in language development.
Abstract
This study investigates the acquisition of clitic climbing by European Portuguese speaking children considering spontaneous production data from three children aged 1;5 to 3;11 (Santos’ corpus: Santos et al., 2014) and data from an elicited production task administered to 64 children aged 5;2 to 8;2. The study shows that: clitic climbing is acquired early, as expected for a parametric property that is dependent on the specification of the functional domain; there is early sensitivity to properties of the adult grammar, although children take a while to determine which specific verbs allow or disallow clitic climbing. In optional contexts younger children prefer clitic climbing constructions over non-climbing constructions. We discuss these results in light of the notion of complexity in language development.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
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Part 1. Syntactic complexity and intervention effects in the L1 acquisition of Romance
- Chapter 1. Acquisition of clitic climbing by European Portuguese children 13
- Chapter 2. Strategies in the production of PP relative clauses in Brazilian Portuguese 39
- Chapter 3. Cost-reducing strategies in the production of Brazilian Portuguese relative clauses 67
- Chapter 4. Some thoughts on (the acquisition of) control 83
- Chapter 5. The production of variable number agreement in Brazilian Portuguese 109
- Chapter 6. Assessing children’s syntactic proficiency through a sentence repetition task 133
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Part 2. Crosslinguistic influence in 2L1 acquisition and L2 learning
- Chapter 7. L1 effects in the L2 acquisition of long-distance binding in European Portuguese 173
- Chapter 8. On the nature of crosslinguistic influence 203
- Chapter 9. Can explicit instruction help L2 learners overcome persistent L1 interference? 229
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Part 3. Language acquisition at the interface in various learning settings
- Chapter 10. Combining Focus VS and Topic constructions 259
- Chapter 11. Gender marking in L1 and L2 French 289
- Chapter 12. The acquisition of disjunction under negation and recursive ni in French 315
- Chapter 13. Deriving scalar implicatures with quantifiers by Romanian children 331
- Chapter 14. The acquisition of mood in child Spanish 355
- Index 379
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1. Syntactic complexity and intervention effects in the L1 acquisition of Romance
- Chapter 1. Acquisition of clitic climbing by European Portuguese children 13
- Chapter 2. Strategies in the production of PP relative clauses in Brazilian Portuguese 39
- Chapter 3. Cost-reducing strategies in the production of Brazilian Portuguese relative clauses 67
- Chapter 4. Some thoughts on (the acquisition of) control 83
- Chapter 5. The production of variable number agreement in Brazilian Portuguese 109
- Chapter 6. Assessing children’s syntactic proficiency through a sentence repetition task 133
-
Part 2. Crosslinguistic influence in 2L1 acquisition and L2 learning
- Chapter 7. L1 effects in the L2 acquisition of long-distance binding in European Portuguese 173
- Chapter 8. On the nature of crosslinguistic influence 203
- Chapter 9. Can explicit instruction help L2 learners overcome persistent L1 interference? 229
-
Part 3. Language acquisition at the interface in various learning settings
- Chapter 10. Combining Focus VS and Topic constructions 259
- Chapter 11. Gender marking in L1 and L2 French 289
- Chapter 12. The acquisition of disjunction under negation and recursive ni in French 315
- Chapter 13. Deriving scalar implicatures with quantifiers by Romanian children 331
- Chapter 14. The acquisition of mood in child Spanish 355
- Index 379