Abstract
The first verbs to participate in VO and SVO combinations, and the
temporal parameters of the spread of these combinatory patterns over
different verbs were investigated. The longitudinal language observations of
16 children, one acquiring English, the others Hebrew, were
examined. The children were observed once a week for 3–12 months, the
observations starting when the children were still in the single-word
stage (1;1–2;1) and ending when they were well into multiword speech
(1;8–2;7). The results indicate that the more verbs children already
know to combine in a certain pattern, the faster they learn new ones.
Apparently children induce from individual word-combinations some
general principles that facilitate further learning. The ‘pathbreaking
verbs’ that begin the acquisition of a novel syntactic rule tend to be
generic verbs expressing the relevant combinatorial property in a
relatively pure fashion: the same verbs that children first combine with
direct objects, are typical grammaticalized markers of transitivity in
many languages. These verbs do not have HIGH TRANSITIVITY as defined
by Hopper & Thompson (1980). Rather, they express fundamental
‘object relations’ of incorporation into, and ejection from the personal.
Crosslinguistic evidence indicates that this may be the basic transitivity
construct in languages. The results raise the possibility that lexical-specific learning of positional patterns is sufficient to account for the
formation of syntactic abstractions.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Psychology,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
126 articles.
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