Author:
CAMPBELL AIMEE L.,TOMASELLO MICHAEL
Abstract
We analyzed the three main types of English dative constructions – the double-object
dative, the to dative, and the for dative – in the spontaneous speech
of seven children from the age of 1;6 to 5;0. The main findings were as follows. First, the
double-object dative was acquired by most of the children before either of the prepositional
datives; this was attributed to the greater frequency with which children heard this construction
with individual verbs. Second, the verbs children used with these constructions were not only the
adult prototypical ones, but also a number of the less prototypical ones; again, this was very likely
due to their frequency and saliency in the language children heard. Third, no support was found
for Ninio's (1999) analysis of the emergence of constructions in terms of a single
“pathbreaking” verb; rather, children began using the double-object dative with
many different verbs and did not follow the trajectory proposed by Ninio (i.e., a single verb is
used for some months before an “explosion” of new verbs is introduced in the
construction). Finally, most of the verbs initially used in the three dative constructions were first
used in other constructions (e.g., a simple transitive); this was even true for some obligatory
datives, such as give and show. The current results provide a starting point
for determining the underlying representations for the different kinds of dative constructions and
for explicating how children understand the interrelations among these and other constructions.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Psychology,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Cited by
78 articles.
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