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The grammatical acquisition of wh-questions in early - Nottingham PDF

330 Pages·2010·12.97 MB·English
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The grammatical acquisition ofwh-questions in early English multi-word speech Caroline Rowland "The weakest argument of all is the notion that if we cannot think of a way to teach something, it must not be learned or learnable" Ervin-Tripp (1971) Thesis submitted to the University of Nottingham for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, October 2000 CONTENTS SECTION 1: REVIEW Page ~o. Chapter 1: Theories of grammatical development 2 Chapter 2: A review ofwh-question acquisition literature 31 SECTION 2: METHOD AND ANALYSES Page No. Chapter 3. Method 52 Chapter 4. Describing the data 66 Chapter 5. Radford's small clause hypothesis 117 Chapter 6. Valian's performance limitations theory 152 Chapter 7. Lexical constructivism 184 SECTION 3: FINAL DISCUSSION Page No. Chapter 8 Discussion 229 REFERENCES 249 268 APPENDICES LIST OF TABLES Number Title Page No. Table 3.1 MLU and age of the 12 children at the start 54 and end of the study Table 3.2 Number of tapes, age and MLU range for each 61 child divided according to Brown's stages of development (Brown, 1973) Table 4.1 Mean number ofwh-types in each wb-context 79 Table 4.2 Mean number of utterances produced in each 81 wh-context (by datapoint) Table 4.3 Mean number of different wh-words used in 83 each wh-context Table 4.4 Summary of progression ofwh-word 85 acquisition Table 4.5 Order of acquisition of auxiliaries by 88 datapoint Table 4.6 Mean number ofwh-questions of each 92 question type - correct use and errors Table 4.7 Number ofwh-question words that occurred 96 with inverted and uninverted auxiliaries Number Title Page ~o. Table 4.8 Total number of auxiliaries that occur 97 inverted and/or uninverted during the uninversion period Table 4.9 Total number.ofwh-contexts produced by 100 each child Table 4.10 Order of acquisition ofwh-words in object wh- 101 questions by datapoint Table 4.11 Order of acquisition ofwh-words in single wh- 102 word contexts by datapoint Table 4.12 Order of acquisition of wh-words in su bject 103 wh-questions by datapoint Table 4.13 Order of acquisition ofwh-words in embedded 104 wh-phrases by datapoint Table 4.14 Order of acquisition of auxiliary lexemes 106 Table 4.15 Order of acquisition of correct wh-questions 108 and errors Table 5.1 Types ofwh-questions and their lexical and 134 functional explanations Table 5.2 Total number of correct wh-questions and 142 different types of errors at stages 1 (lexical stage), 2 and 3 (functional stages) Number Title Page :\0. Table 6.1 First transcript used for the auxiliary omission 170 analysis Table 6.2 Percentage presence in obligatory context of 171 copula be, auxiliary have and auxiliary be Table 6.3 Percentage presence in obligatory contexts of 173 copula is/are, auxiliary havelhas and auxiliary is/are Table 6.4 Number ofwh-words that occur with inverted 176 and uninverted auxiliaries and percent proportion of the total number of times each 'wh-word occurred with either form Table 6.S Total number of wh-word+lexical auxiliary 177 combinations (what, where, how, why, which) that occur inverted and/or uninverted Table 7.1 Number of productive combinations produced 205 by each child and number and % of the total number ofwh-question types that these combinations account for Table 7.2 Number ofwh-question types produced with 206 what's and where's and percent of the total number ofwh-question types accounted for by what's and where's Number Title Page No. Table 7.3 Table 7.3. The number of combinations, the 208 number of productive combinations and the percentage of total wh-question data accounted for by the productive combinations - mothers and children Table 7.4 Number of what's and where's and percentage 211 of the total number ofwh-question types accounted for by what's and where's for mother and child data Table 7.5 Mean input frequency of the 'learnt' and 'not 215 learnt' combinations Table 7.6 Total number wh-word+auxiliary 217 combinations that occur inverted and/or uninverted and their frequency in the input sample LIST OF FIGURES Number Title Page No. Figure 2.1 Surface structure template for the object wh 39 question what should I bring? Figure 4.1 Percentage ofwh-questions with inverted, 95 uninverted and missing auxiliaries as a proportion of the total number ofwh-questions produced Figure 5.1 Percentage ofwh-questions that fit into original 144 lexical and functional categories at stages 1, 2 and 3. Figure 5.2 Percentage ofwh-questions that fit into 145 modified lexical and functional categories at stages 1, 2 and 3 Figure 6.1 Deep structure template for the sentence she is 157 a girl Figure 6.2 Deep structure template for the sentence she be 157 . . swlmnung Figure 6.3 Deep structure template for the sentence she 157 . . sWimming LIST OF APPENDICIES Number Title Page No. Appendix A MLU of each child by transcript 268 Appendix B Screening Procedure Forms 270 Appendix C Progress Monitoring Forms 293 Appendix D Wh-context analysis - data for individual 301 children Appendix E Wh-word order of acquisition analysis using 305 rd 3 use criterion - data for individual children Appendix F Object wh-questions with auxiliaries produced 308 by children at datapoint 1 Appendix G Un inversion errors produced by the 12 309 children Appendix H Order of acquisition of auxiliary lexemes using 310 rd 3 use criterion Appendix I Number of correct wh-questions and errors 311 produced at each stage of development 314 Appendix J Number ofwh-questions that occur with present and omitted copula be, is and are, auxiliary have (category), has and have (Iexeme) and auxilia~' be, is and are Number Title Page 1\ o. Appendix K Name and number of productive wh 315 word+auxiliary combinations and percentage of the total number ofwh-questions they account for Appendix L Frequency in the mother ofwb 3I~ word+auxiliary combinations (with be and have only) that were learnt and not learnt b)7 the children Acknowledgements There are many people to whom is owed a great debt of gratitude. My husband, parents and mother-in-law for supporting me as well as providing valuable advice on first drafts. Lauren and Amy, whose language development throughout the past six years has provided constant delight and a few nasty surprises. Friends and colleagues at both Nottingham and Derby Universities who provided help and advice, tea and sympathy. Elena Lieven, my undergraduate supervisor and now collaborator who first stimulated my interest in language development and Anna Theakston. my invaluable 'other half in Manchester. The twelve mothers and children who allowed us into their homes to share part of their lives for a year. And [mally, Julian Pine for the hours and hours he has spent correcting, arguing, listening and encouragmg. The data collection, transcription and morphological coding presented in this work was conducted while the author 'was employed as a Research Associate on ESRC Grant Number R000236393.

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Table 4.15 Order of acquisition of correct wh-questions. 108 and errors . preliminary account of young children's wh-question development from a constructivist
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