Abstract
How infant and adult humans learn languages and what this tells us about the various aspects of the language system is currently a central topic in linguistic research, one that more and more includes bilingualism and language attrition in its embrace. Despite the centrality of the problem of language acquisition for Generative Grammar, it is fair to say that other modes of language learning are now entering the arena of discussion, having shown their potential for discovery in Cognitive Science at large. Some aspects of grammatical knowledge that are hard to acquire and yield differences between native and non-native speakers reveal that language learning is indeed a special type of learning, which in turn reveals that knowing more about these entails knowing more about language.
Funding statement: This work was supported by the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration [613465 (AThEME)]; Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad [FFI2015-64183-P]; Basque Government [IT665-13].
Acknowledgments
The author is grateful to Pedro Guijarro Fuentes for the opportunity to contribute to this Special Issue with a commentary and for all the feedback provided. Mistakes and confusions remain solely mine.
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© 2017 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Point of View
- On reelecting monolingualism: Fortification, fragility, and stamina
- Research Articles
- Learning Korean honorifics through individual and collaborative writing tasks and written corrective feedback
- Young L2 learners’ online processing of information in a graded reader during reading-only and reading-while-listening conditions: A study of eye-movements
- Exploring identities of novice mainland Chinese teachers in Hong Kong: Insights from teaching creative writing at primary schools across borders
- Attitudinal bias, individual differences, and second language speakers’ interactional performance
- Effects of self-regulated learning strategy use on motivation in EFL writing: A comparison between high and low achievers in Hong Kong primary schools
- Bilinguals and knowledge of language: a commentary to “Language Acquisition and Linguistic Theory”
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Point of View
- On reelecting monolingualism: Fortification, fragility, and stamina
- Research Articles
- Learning Korean honorifics through individual and collaborative writing tasks and written corrective feedback
- Young L2 learners’ online processing of information in a graded reader during reading-only and reading-while-listening conditions: A study of eye-movements
- Exploring identities of novice mainland Chinese teachers in Hong Kong: Insights from teaching creative writing at primary schools across borders
- Attitudinal bias, individual differences, and second language speakers’ interactional performance
- Effects of self-regulated learning strategy use on motivation in EFL writing: A comparison between high and low achievers in Hong Kong primary schools
- Bilinguals and knowledge of language: a commentary to “Language Acquisition and Linguistic Theory”