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Language Acquisition Studies in Generative Grammar: Papers in Honor of Kenneth Wexler from the 1991 GLOW Workshops PDF

414 Pages·1994·17.64 MB·English
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Preview Language Acquisition Studies in Generative Grammar: Papers in Honor of Kenneth Wexler from the 1991 GLOW Workshops

LANGUAGE ACQUISITION STUDIES IN GENERATIVE GRAMMAR LANGUAGE ACQUISITION & LANGUAGE DISORDERS EDITORS Harald Clahsen William Rutherford University of Essex University of Southern California EDITORIAL BOARD Melissa Bowerman (Max Planck Institut für Psycholinguistik, Nijmegen) Patricia Clancy (University of California at Santa Barbara) Werner Deutsch (Universität Braunschweig) Kenji Hakuta (Stanford University) Kenneth Hyltenstam (University of Stockholm) Peter Jordens (Free University, Amsterdam) Barry McLaughlin (University of California at Santa Cruz) Jürgen Meisel (Universität Hamburg) Anne Mills (University of Amsterdam) Csaba Pleh (University of Budapest) Michael Sharwood Smith (University of Utrecht) Catherine Snow (Harvard University) Jürgen Weissenborn (Max Planck Institut für Psycholinguistik, Nijmegen) Lydia White (McGill University) Helmut Zobl (Carleton University, Ottawa) Volume 8 Teun Hoekstra & Bonnie D. Schwartz (eds) Language Acquisition Studies in Generative Grammar LANGUAGE ACQUISITION STUDIES IN GENERATIVE GRAMMAR PAPERS IN HONOR OF KENNETH WEXLER FROM THE 1991 GLOW WORKSHOPS Edited by TEUN HOEKSTRA Leiden University BONNIE D. SCHWARTZ University of Durham JOHN BENJAMINS PUBLISHING COMPANY AMSTERDAM/PHILADELPHIA 1994 The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences — Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Language acquisition studies in generative grammar : papers in honor of Kenneth Wexler from the 1991 GLOW workshops / edited by Teun Hoekstra, Bonnie D. Schwartz. p. cm. -- (Language acquisition & language disorders : ISSN 0925-0123; v. 8) Based on papers presented at workshops on syntactic acquisition organized as part of the 14th GLOW Conference which was held Mar. 1991, Leiden University. Includes bibliographical references and indexes. Contents: Introduction : on the initial stages of language acquisition / Teun Hoekstra & Bonnie Schwartz - VP, null arguments, and COMP projections / Nina Hyams -- Crosslinguistic evidence for functional projections in early child grammar / Vivian Deprez & Amy Pierce ~ The seeds of structure : a syntactic analysis of the acquisition of case marking / Harald Clahsen, Sonja Eisenbeiss & Anne Vainikka — From adjunct to head / Teun Hoekstra & Peter Jordens — Early null subjects and root null subjects / Luigi Rizzi — Asking questions without CPs? : on the acquisition of root wh-questions in Bernese Swiss German and Standard German / Zvi Penner ~ Successful cyclic move­ ment / Rosalind Thornton & Stephen Crain - Early acquisition of scrambling in Japanese / Yukio Otsu - Direct access to X'-theory : evidence from Korean and Turkish adults learning German / Anne Vainikka & Martha Young-Scholten ~ Word order and nominative case in non-native language acquisition : a longitudinal study of (L1 Turkish) German interlanguage / Bonnie D. Schwartz & Rex A. Sprouse ~ Optionality and the initial state in L2 development / Lynn Eubank. 1. Language acquisition. 2. Generative grammar. 3. Grammar, Comparative and gen­ eral-Syntax. I. Hoekstra, Teun. II. Schwartz, Bonnie D. III. Wexler, Kenneth. IV. GLOW Conference (14th : 1992 : Leiden University) V. Series. P118.L2544 1993 401'.93~dc20 93-43090 ISBN 90 272 2472 2 (Eur.) / 1-55619-244-4 (US) (Hb; alk. paper) CIP ISBN 90 272 2473 0 (Eur.) / 1-55619-245-2 (US) (Pb; alk. paper) © Copyright 1994 - John Benjamins B.V. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, by print, photoprint, microfilm, or any other means, without written permission from the publisher. John Benjamins Publishing Co. • P.O. Box 75577 • 1070 AN Amsterdam • The Netherlands John Benjamins North America • 821 Bethlehem Pike • Philadelphia, PA 19118 • USA Contents Tables and Figures vii Abbreviations ix Contributors xi Introduction: On the initial states of language acquisition 1 Teun Hoekstra & Bonnie Schwartz VP, Null Arguments and COMP Projections 21 Nina Hyams Crosslinguistic Evidence for Functional Projections in Early Child Grammar 57 Vivian Deprez & Amy Pierce The Seeds of Structure: A syntactic analysis of the acquisition of Case marking 85 Harald Clahsen, Sonja Eisenbeiss & Anne Vainikka From Adjunct to Head 119 Teun Hoekstra & Peter Jordens Early Null Subjects and Root Null Subjects 151 Luigi Rizzi Asking Questions without CPs? On the Acquisition of Root wh-questions in Bernese Swiss German and Standard German 177 Zvi Penner Succesful Cyclic Movement 215 Rosalind Thornton & Stephen Crain Early Acquisition of Scrambling in Japanese 253 Yukio Otsu Direct Access to X'-Theory: Evidence from Korean and Turkish adults learning German 265 Anne Vainikka & Martha Young-Scholten Word Order and Nominative Case in Non-Native Language Acquisition: A longitudinal study of (L1 Turkish) German Interlanguage 317 Bonnie D. Schwartz & Rex A. Sprouse Optionality and the Initial State in L2 Development 369 Lynn Eubank Index of Languages 389 Index of Names 391 Index of Subjects 397 Tables and Figures Tables Deprez & Pierce 1. Early Distribution of Negatives in Three Children 1 2. Percentage of finite forms prior to V2 71 Clahsen, Eisenbeiss & Vainikka 1. Suffixes for Case Marking in German 92 2. Omissions of Determiners 99 3. Noun Phrases with Adjectives 100 4. The Acquisition of Structural Case in Finnish 111 Hoekstra & Jordens 1. Distribution of Modal Expressions 131 Thornton & Grain 1. Production of Argument and Adjunct Questions by Individual Subjects 235 2. Comparison of Downstairs Responses versus Production of Medial-wh Responses 240 3. Double Dissociation Downstairs Answers versus Medial-wh 240 4. Comparison of Responses Experiments 2 and 4 247 Otsu 1. Reliance on NNV Strategy 256 2. Various Word Orders with Five Selected Verbs 257 3. OSV Order in Utterances of Five Two- and Three Year Olds 258 4. Test Results 260 viii TABLES AND FIGURES Vainikka & Young-Scholten 1. Implicational Table (to Be Revised) 278 2. Overt Subjects at the AGRP Stage 289 3. Revised Implicational Table 296 A. Biographic Information and Source of Data (Alphabetical Order) 300 B. Breakdown of Analyzed and Unanalyzed Utterances with Verbs (Alphabetical Order) 301 C. Position of the Verb in the VP* (Developmental Order) 302 D. Bare-VP Sentences and Sentences with More than a VP (Developmental Order) 303 E. Empty Subjects (Developmental Order) 304 F. Agreement on Raised Main Verbs (Developmental Order) 305 G-l. Distribution of -n and -0 on All Verbs (Early FP Stage) 306 G-2. Distribution of -e (ISG) and -t (3SG) on Main Vs (Early FP Stage) 306 H-l. Distribution of sein 'to be' (Early FP Stage) 307 H-2. Distribution of Modals (Early FP Stage) 307 I-1. Proportion of -n and Other Suffixes on Raised Main Verbs (AGRP Stage) 308 I-2. Agreement Suffixes (Except for -n) on Raised Main Verbs (AgrP Stage) 308 Figures 1. Empty Subjects in the Two Types of Sentences 280 2. Verb Raising and the Specifier Position 294 Tables Schwartz & Sprouse 1. Parametric Differences between Turkish and German 334 2. Stage 1 338 3. Stage 2 339 4. Stage 3 341 5. Declarative Main Clauses with Two or More Non-Verbal Constitu­ ents 341 6. Summary of the Parametric Values for Turkish and German 360 Eubank 1. Main Clause Agreement by Affix for Jose 383 2. Thematic Verb Agreement and Infinitives in SV and VS orders for Jose 385 Abbreviations Object language is italicized throughout, with a translation in English following in single quotation marks. Additionaly, italics are used for emphasis. Parts of examples may be highlighted by underscoring. An overscore must be read as negating the overscored (e.g., A vs. A), whereas a prime indicates a projection level (e.g., X'). The word case begins with capital C when it refers to grammatical Case. Technical terms are set in small capitals on their first occurrence only. Grammatical categories are printed in full capitals, usually abbreviated; features are represented between angled brackets. Indications of children's ages have the format (years;months;days). In the interlinear glosses, a hyphen is used only if the corresponding English gloss carries a hyphen. When one word in the example corresponds to two words in the gloss, a period separates the two. Abbreviations are printed in small capitals. When an abbreviation corresponds to an affix, the plus-sign is used. If an abbreviation merely specifies the preceding element, it is connected to that element with a colon. Finally, if an abbreviation itself consists of two parts, these parts are separated by a hairline space. Abbreviations Ө theta (= thematic) ASL American Sign Language  phi (= person, number, and AUX auxiliary gender features) bv bound variable A(D) adjective C(OMP) complementizer ADJ adjunct D(ET) determiner ADV adverb DB discourse binder AGR agreement DO direct object ARG argument ECP empty category principle

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This is a collection of essays on the native and non-native acquisition of syntax within the "Principles and Parameters" framework. In line with current methodology in the study of adult grammars, language acquistion is studied from a comparative perspective. The unifying theme is the issue of the "
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