Children’s acquisition of word order variation: A study of subject placement in embedded clauses in Norwegian
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30479Date
2023-05-29Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Norwegian embedded clauses give children two options for subject placement: preceding or
following negation (S-Neg/Neg-S). In the adult language, S-Neg is the ‘default’ and highly
frequent option, and Neg-S is infrequent in children’s input. However, Neg-S may be argued
to be the structurally less complex. We investigate whether children are aware of the
existence of both subject positions, and if they prefer the more frequent or the less complex
position. Through an elicited production task with monolingual Norwegian children
(N=33, age 3;1-6;1) we find that children in general overuse the Neg-S option, and we
suggest that children have an inherent preference for the less complex position, due to a
principle of structural economy. We also find that a group of children display U-shaped
development, first using only S-Neg, then only Neg-S and finally S-Neg again, and we relate
this to structure building and economy of movement.
Publisher
Cambridge University PressCitation
Ringstad TL, Westergaard M. Children’s acquisition of word order variation: A study of subject placement in embedded clauses in Norwegian. Journal of Child Language. 2023Metadata
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