Author:
TOMASELLO MICHAEL,AKHTAR NAMEERA,DODSON KELLY,REKAU LAURA
Abstract
A fundamental question of child language acquisition is children's
productivity with newly learned forms. The current study addressed
this question experimentally with children just beginning to combine
words. Ten children between 1;6 and 1;11 were taught four new words,
two nouns and two verbs, over multiple sessions. All four words were
modelled in minimal syntactic contexts. The experimenter gave children
multiple opportunities to produce the words and made attempts to elicit
morphological endings (plural for nouns, past tense for verbs). Overall,
children combined the novel nouns productively with already known
words much more often than they did the novel verbs – by many orders
of magnitude. Several children also pluralized a newly learned noun,
whereas none of them formed a past tense with a newly learned verb. A
follow-up study using a slightly different methodology confirmed the
finding of limited syntactic productivity with verbs. Hypotheses accounting
for this asymmetry in the early use of nouns and verbs are discussed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Psychology,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
128 articles.
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