Abstract
This paper focuses on the acquisition of linguistic devices used for discourse cohesion in
Chinese and French. Particular attention is paid to how two types of learners (child L1
[Chinese, French] and adult L2 [Chinese learning French]) acquire the
linguistic means for marking topics, in particular French dislocation,and its
discourse-pragmatic functions. Data consist of narratives based on picture sequences, produced
in absence of mutual knowledge. Previous studies in L2 acquisition have shown that, at early
stages, adult learners' utterances and texts are organized along semantic and pragmatic
principles, rather than along structural ones. These principles play a preponderant role in Chinese
as well. French shares this tendency with Chinese, insofar as particular utterance
patterns—dislocations—mark topic and antitopic. Results show that French
children have to acquire the discourse functions related to dislocations. Postbasic-variety adult
learners readily use French dislocations to mark—appropriately—a variety of
discourse-pragmatic functions. However, the adult learners quite often use forms that deviate
from the dislocated form found in target language French. This is all the more interesting because
the chosen forms, though not usable without a certain context in standard French, do occur in
colloquial French and are clearly functionally related to the target forms.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Education
Cited by
23 articles.
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