dc.description.abstract | Language learners typically experience cross-linguistic influence (CLI) from one
or several previously acquired languages when acquiring an additional language.
Learners of a second language (L2) are influenced by their native languages in
all language domains ranging from phonology, lexicon, and morphosyntax, to
semantics, discourse, and pragmatics. In third (and subsequent) language (L3/
Ln) acquisition, however, there is more than one potential source of influence, as
the learner already knows at least two languages, which both have the potential to
influence subsequent language acquisition. This is the reason why existing models
of L3/Ln language acquisition have mainly focused on issues related to CLI: (i)
the source of CLI (L1, L2, both languages, typologically closest language, language
of communication), (ii) the type of CLI (only facilitative or both facilitative and
non-facilitative), and (iii) the extent of CLI (wholesale or property-by-property
or hybrid). Different models attribute CLI to different factors, and there is still no
consensus in multilingual acquisition research. According to existing models of L3
acquisition, the following factors may be the source of CLI: Order and/or manner
of acquisition (The L2 Status Factor, e.g., Bardel & Falk 2007; L1 Transfer, e.g., Jin
2009), language use (The Language of Communication Model, e.g., Fallah et al.,
2016; Fallah & Jabbari 2018) or some kind of structural similarity (The Typological Primacy Model, Rothman, 2015; The Linguistic Proximity Model, Westergaard
et al., 2017; Westergaard 2021a, b; The Scalpel Model, Slabakova, 2017). The five
articles in this issue zoom in on this last factor, structural similarity, specifically in
phonology and morphosyntax, which are examined at early stages of L3 acquisition as well as in L3 development. | en_US |