The role of underspecification in grammar
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/12975Date
2017-01-17Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Lohndal, TerjeAbstract
In order to understand the human ability for language, we cannot simply focus on the
idealized monolingual speaker or signer (Chomsky, 1965). Rather, as much work in second
language acquisition has recognized, it is also necessary to study instances where a person
masters two or more languages at different levels of proficiency. Today’s globalized world
with increased migration will further increase the number of multilingual speakers. However,
another piece of the puzzle involves understanding the grammatical system of bilingual
speakers who use both a sign language and a spoken language, or put differently, bimodal
bilingualism. This latter type of bilingualism is clearly yet another possible human I-language
(in the sense of Chomsky, 1986), meaning that our theories of the human language faculty
also need to accommodate facts from this group of speakers. It is this population that is the
focus of the current keynote paper by Lillo-Martin, Müller de Quadros and Chen Pichler
(2016, henceforth LMC).
Description
Accepted manuscript version. Published version available in Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism (2017) 6(6), p.782-785.