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McDaniel, Dana; And Others – Language Acquisition, 1991
Two studies are discussed that were conducted to investigate the status of control principles in children's grammar. An attempt is made to characterize the children's grammar types in terms of Universal Grammar and to account for how the grammar types change. (35 references) (JL)
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Research, Linguistic Theory, Longitudinal Studies
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Petinou, Kakia; Terzi, Arhonto – Language Acquisition, 2002
Focuses on an exceptional instance of nonadult positioning of clitics in early Cypriot Greek and Cypriot Greek with specific language impairment. Attributes misplaced clitics to children's incomplete knowledge concerning properties of the inflectional (Infl) particles, which interact in crucial ways with finite verb movement to mood. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Children, Foreign Countries, Greek, Language Acquisition
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Crain, Stephen; And Others – Language Acquisition, 1996
Argues against the linguistic account of children's responses to sentences with universal quantification and reports on investigations of their comprehension and production of quantificational sentences. The article concludes that young children have full grammatical competence with universal quantification. (58 references) (Author/CK)
Descriptors: Adults, American Sign Language, Child Language, Deafness
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O'Day, Paula A. – Language Acquisition, 1994
This study investigated four- and six-year-olds' support pursuing the role of positive evidence in the acquisition of the knowledge of lexical features such as the control status of individual verbs. Findings seem to be compatible with a claim that grammatical knowledge is instantaneous. (Contains 24 references.) (Author/LB)
Descriptors: Child Language, Grammar, Language Acquisition, Language Processing
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Hamann, Cornelia – Language Acquisition, 1996
Investigates the 10% to 20% null subject stage in 3-year-olds in Germany and shows that this stage, though long, is not final. Findings indicate that children in this phase use structures found neither in the state of early null subjects nor in adult German, namely, postverbal referential null subjects. Further study is proposed. (94 references)…
Descriptors: Adults, Age, Child Development, Child Language
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Wang, Qi; And Others – Language Acquisition, 1992
The prediction that young Chinese- and English-speaking children should exhibit parallel performance in their use of null arguments was investigated using an elicited production task. The hypothesis that early English allows null subjects was upheld; the argument that early English is a discourse-oriented language like Chinese was not upheld. (26…
Descriptors: Child Language, Chinese, Contrastive Linguistics, Developmental Stages
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Hestvik, Arild; Philip, William – Language Acquisition, 2000
Four experimental studies were designed to test, in Norwegian, the hypothesis that children's non-adultlike interpretations of pronouns may be partly attributable to a lexical factor interacting with the A-Chain Condition. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Language Acquisition, Language Processing, Linguistic Theory
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Guasti, Maria Teresa – Language Acquisition, 1995
Argues that early French relative clauses (RCs) with gaps involve movement of the relative head. The article suggests that children lack relative operators for maturational reasons. This account shows that the deviation of early RCs from adult grammar is due to this lacuna and is compensated for in a manner consistent with Universal Grammar. (39…
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Language, Data Collection, French
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Goodluck, Helen; Stojanovic, Danijela – Language Acquisition, 1996
Discusses that Serbo-Croation is a language with a dual system of relative clause formation and describes elicited production and comprehension experiments conducted with preschool children. Results are discussed in the context of the cross-linguistic typology of relative clauses and previous studies of the acquisition of relative clauses. (27…
Descriptors: Child Language, Contrastive Linguistics, Language Processing, Language Research