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Peer reviewedErreich, Anne; And Others – Journal of Child Language, 1980
Presents an outline for a theory of syntax acquisition, surveys other approaches to language acquisition, and addresses the following methodological issues: (1) the relevance of linguistic theory to the model; (2) how the model is tested; and (3) the domain of the theory. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Research, Language Universals
Peer reviewedMuma, John R.; Zwycewicz-Emory, Carol L. – Journal of Child Language, 1979
The present study is an attempt to apply a paradigm to the shift of verbal behavior before and after the age of seven in order to see if linguistic contexts affect verbal behavior differentially before seven or after seven. (Author/CFM)
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Associative Learning, Child Language, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedLandon, Sarah J.; Sommers, Ronald K. – Language and Speech, 1979
When 20 highly talkative and 20 much less talkative preschool children were measured for articulation, grammar, receptive syntax, and sentence repetition, the performances of the highly talkative children were significantly superior on all measures. (Author/RL)
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Communication Research, Communication Skills, Comparative Analysis
Taeschner, Traute; And Others – Rassegna Italiana di Linguistica Applicata, 1978
The purpose of this study was to attempt to verify the theory of Taeschner and Volterra (1976) that bilingual children pass through three distinct phases while becoming perfectly bilingual. The 12 subjects were English-Italian bilingual children between the ages of 1.6 and 4.6. (CFM)
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, English, Grammar
Peer reviewedLimber, John – Journal of Child Language, 1976
Inferences about linguistic competence in children are typically based on spontaneous speech. Children's use of complex object and adverbial noun phrase is seen as a reflection of pragmatic factors. Similar adult patterns indicate children's lack of subject clauses may be due to the nature of spontaneous speech. (CHK)
Descriptors: Child Language, Discourse Analysis, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns
Peer reviewedPine, Julian M.; Lieven, Elena V. M. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1997
A study tested models concerning syntactic categories in early multiword speech by investigating overlap in contexts in which children (n=11) used determiner types. Results indicate children have little knowledge of relationships between different determiner types, suggesting development of an adultlike syntactic determiner category may be…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Child Language, Determiners (Languages), Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedRondal, Jean A.; Cession, Anne – Journal of Child Language, 1990
Input language addressed to language-learning children was analyzed to assess the quality of the semantic-syntactic correspondence posited by the semantic bootstrapping hypothesis. This correspondence was strong--objects were labeled with nouns, actions with verbs, attributes with adjectives--and may serve to make children's construction of…
Descriptors: Caregiver Speech, Language Acquisition, Language Research, Linguistic Input
Peer reviewedLass, Roger – Journal of Linguistics, 1990
Uses illustrations from the history of Germanica to explain the concept of exaptation when dealing with language evolution, i.e., the reuse of language material that has been coded by morphology but has since lost its grammatical distinction. (46 references) (GLR)
Descriptors: Afrikaans, Contrastive Linguistics, Diachronic Linguistics, Grammar
Peer reviewedIngham, Richard – Language Acquisition, 1994
Research is reported showing that children are lexically conservative in the domain of learning argument omissibility. Two studies (one observational case study, one experimental) show a relationship between the argument frames used in input and those used by child subjects. (Contains 38 references.) (Author/LB)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Language, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedSavage-Rumbaugh, E. Sue; And Others – Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 1993
A two-year-old child and an eight-year-old bonobo exposed to spoken English and lexigrams from infancy were asked to respond to novel sentences. Both subjects comprehended novel requests and simple syntactic devices. The bonobo decoded the syntactic device of word recursion more accurately than the child; the child performed better than the bonobo…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Evolution, Expressive Language, Infants
Peer reviewedWeiss, Amy L.; Johnson, Cynthia J. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1993
School-aged, hearing-impaired children's propensity for incorporating complex syntax into the narratives and conversations they produced was investigated. Language samples containing both conversations and narratives in the form of story retellings were collected from seven subjects with moderate-to-severe hearing losses. (48 references) (VWL)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Comparative Analysis, Discourse Analysis, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedGoldin-Meadow, Susan; Mylander, Carolyn – Language, 1990
This paper reviews research findings on the structural properties of deaf childrens' gestural communication systems and evaluates those properties in the context of data gained from other approaches to the question of the young child's language-making capacity. (over 100 references) (JL)
Descriptors: Deafness, Language Acquisition, Language Research, Linguistic Input
Paterson, Kevin B.; Liversedge, Simon P.; White, Diane; Filik, Ruth; Jaz, Kristina – Language Acquisition, 2006
We report 3 studies investigating children's and adults' interpretation of ambiguous focus in sentences containing the focus-sensitive quantifier only. In each experiment, child and adult participants compared sentences with only in a preverbal position and counterpart sentences without only against a series of pictures depicting events that…
Descriptors: Sentences, Children, Adults, Comparative Analysis
Williams, John N. – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2006
The degree to which native and non-native readers interpret English sentences incrementally was investigated by examining plausibility effects on reanalysis processes. Experiment 1 required participants to read sentences word by word and to make on-line plausibility judgements. The results showed that natives and non-natives immediately computed…
Descriptors: Sentences, Memory, Task Analysis, Second Language Learning
Argyri, Efrosyni; Sorace, Antonella – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2007
The point of departure of this study is the well-known hypothesis according to which structures that involve the syntax-pragmatics interface and instantiate a surface overlap between two languages are more vulnerable to crosslinguistic influence than purely syntactic domains (e.g. Muller and Hulk, 2001). In exploring the validity of this…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Language Dominance, Syntax, Monolingualism

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