A Rare Structure at the Syntax-Discourse Interface: Heritage and Spanish-Dominant Native Speakers Weigh In.
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/8461Dato
2014-03-03Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
The present study examines knowledge of the discourse-appropriateness of Clitic
Right Dislocation (CLRD) in a population of Heritage (HS) and Spanish-dominant Native
Speakers in order to test the predictions of the Interface Hypothesis (IH; Sorace 2011). The IH
predicts that speakers in language contact situations will experience difficulties with integrating
information involving the interface of syntax and discourse modules. CLRD relates a dislocated
constituent to a discourse antecedent, requiring integration of syntax and pragmatics. Results
from an acceptability judgment task did not support the predictions of the IH. No statistical
differences between the HSs’ performance and that of L1-dominant native speakers were
evidenced when participants were presented with an offline task. Thus, our study did not find
any evidence of “incomplete acquisition” (Montrul 2008) as it pertains to this specific linguistic
structure.
Sitering
Language Acquisition 21(2014) s. 411-429Metadata
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