Abstract
Abstract
The present work investigated how morphological generalization, namely the way speakers extend their knowledge to
novel complex words, is influenced by sources of variability in language and speaker properties. For this purpose, the study
focused on a Semitic language (Hebrew), characterized by unique non-concatenative morphology, and native (L1) as well as
non-native (L2) speakers. Two elicited production tasks tested what information sources speakers employ in verbal inflectional
class generalization, i.e., in forming complex novel verbs. Phonological similarity was tested in Experiment 1 and argument structure in Experiment 2. The analysis focused on the
two most common Hebrew inflectional classes, Paal and Piel, which also constituted the vast
majority of responses in the two tasks. Unlike the commonly found outcomes in Romance inflectional class generalization, the
results yielded, solely for Piel, a graded phonological similarity effect and a robust argument structure effect, i.e., more Piel
responses in a direct object context than without. The L2 pattern partially differed from the L1: (i) argument structure effect
for L2 speakers was weaker, and (ii) L2 speakers produced more Paal than Piel responses. The results are discussed within the
framework of rule-based and input-based accounts.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Cognitive Neuroscience,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
2 articles.
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