Asymmetries in relative clause comprehension in three European sign languages

Author:

Hauser Charlotte1ORCID,Zorzi Giorgia2ORCID,Aristodemo Valentina1,Giustolisi Beatrice3ORCID,Gras Doriane1ORCID,Sala Rita4ORCID,Amat Jordina Sánchez2ORCID,Cecchetto Carlo5ORCID,Donati Caterina1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Université de Paris – LLF, CNRS. 8 place Paul Ricoeur, 75013, Paris

2. Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Roc Boronat, 138, 08018, Barcelona

3. Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, Piazza dell’Ateneo Nuovo, 1 - 20126, Milano

4. Université Paris 8 – SFL, CNRS. 59/61 rue Pouchet, 75849 Paris cedex 17

5. Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, Piazza dell’Ateneo Nuovo, 1 - 20126, Milano, IT; Université Paris 8 – SFL, CNRS. 59/61 rue Pouchet, 75849 Paris cedex 17

Abstract

Relativization is a robust subordinating type across languages, displaying important typological variability concerning the position of the nominal head that the relative clause modifies, and sign languages are no exception. It has been widely assumed since Keenan & Comrie (1977) that the subject position is more accessible to relativization than object and oblique positions. The main aim of this paper is to investigate the extension of this famous generalization both across modalities (sign as opposed to spoken languages) and across relativization typologies (internally as opposed to externally headed relatives), and to verify how it interacts with age of first language exposure. We here report the results of a sentence-to-picture matching task assessing the comprehension of subject and object relative clauses (RCs) in three sign languages: French Sign Language (LSF), Catalan Sign Language (LSC), and Italian Sign Language (LIS). The results are that object RCs are never easier to comprehend than subject RCs. Remarkably, this is independent from the type of relative clause (internally or externally headed). As for the impact of age of exposure, we found that native signers outperform non-native signers and that a delay in language exposure emphasizes the subject/object asymmetry. Our results introduce a new potential diagnostic for LF movement: the existence of a Subject Advantage in comprehension can be used as a reliable and measurable cue for the existence of long-distance dependencies, including covert ones.

Publisher

Open Library of the Humanities

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference92 articles.

1. Barberà, Gemma. 2020. Syntax: 3.4. Relative Clauses. In Josep Quer & Gemma Barberà (eds.), A Grammar of Catalan Sign Language (LSC). 1st ed. (SIGN-HUB Sign Language Grammar Series), 230–237. http://sign-hub.eu/grammars/…)

2. Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models using lme4;Bates, DouglasMartin MaechlerBen BolkerSteve Walker;Journal of Statistical Software,2015

3. Where did all the arguments go?: Argument-changing properties of classifiers in ASL;Benedicto, ElenaDiane Brentari;Natural Language & Linguistic Theory,2004

4. The raising analysis of relative clauses: A reply to Borsley;Bianchi, Valentina;Linguistic Inquiry,2000

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