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Vincenzo Moscati – Journal of Child Language, 2025
Young Romance speakers can structure their sentences by dislocating multiple constituents to the left periphery, resulting in non-canonical word orders. Production data, however, show that this ordering is rigid: only SOV sequences are attested, an observation reminiscent of Superiority. The first goal of the paper is to replicate this observation…
Descriptors: Italian, Sentence Structure, Word Order, Intervention
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Breanne E. Wylie; Deborah Z. Kamliot; Thomas D. Lyon; J. Zoe Klemfuss – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2025
Children's understanding of the temporal terms "first," "before," and "after" has implications for describing experienced events, but has typically been studied by asking them to interpret described events. In this study, one hundred and one 3- to 6-year-olds completed two tasks. In the description task, children…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Preschool Children, Task Analysis, Bias
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Ziqi Wang; Xiaolu Yang; Stella Christie; Rushen Shi – First Language, 2025
Children make use of various information in linguistic input to learn verbs, including syntactic distribution and semantic features. Within the intransitive verb class, unaccusative and unergative verbs differ in distribution with respect to word order as well as in semantic features such as telicity. Both the distributional and semantic…
Descriptors: Mandarin Chinese, Verbs, Language Acquisition, Cues
Jessica Ann Kotfila – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Syntactic movement is central to mainstream generative theories of syntax (Chomsky, 1957; 1981; 1995; 2001). Under this view, sentences contain words that have moved and words that have not. Children only ever hear words in their moved positions so it is unclear how they could determine the ways these constituents must be merged and moved from…
Descriptors: Syntax, Sentences, Word Order, Language Acquisition
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Mathurin Leelasetakul – rEFLections, 2025
This present study examines the lexical frames in natural disaster news with the goal to create a list of commonly-occurring lexical frames in this news genre as a resource for students and teachers. A lexical frame in this study is defined as a sequence of words with a slot of one word within the frame that can be filled by two or more variants.…
Descriptors: Natural Disasters, News Media, Lexicology, Word Order
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Gail Moroschan; Elena Nicoladis; Farzaneh Anjomshoae – Journal of Child Language, 2025
Usage-based theories of children's syntactic acquisition (e.g., Tomasello, 2000a) predict that children's abstract lexical categories emerge from their experience with particular words in constructions in their input. Because modifiers in English are almost always prenominal, children might initially treat adjectives similarly to nouns when used…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Usage, Nouns, Form Classes (Languages)
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Ziqi Wang; Xiaolu Yang; Rushen Shi – Journal of Child Language, 2024
Languages employ different means to manifest the unaccusative-unergative distinction. In Mandarin Chinese, unaccusative verbs are allowed in the inversion construction "V-le NP", while unergative verbs are not. This grammaticality contrast brings a presence/absence contrast between the two verb classes in the inversion construction in…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Mandarin Chinese, Word Order, Cues
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Tina Ringstad; Marit Westergaard – Journal of Child Language, 2024
Norwegian embedded clauses give children two options for subject placement: preceding or following negation (S-Neg/Neg-S). In the adult language, S-Neg is the 'default' and highly frequent option, and Neg-S is infrequent in children's input. However, Neg-S may be argued to be the structurally less complex. We investigate whether children are aware…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Norwegian, Word Order, Sentence Structure
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Laura Wagner; Rachael Frush Holt – Journal of Child Language, 2025
We investigated older children's (7-12 years) ability to comprehend "before" and "after" sentences. Results found that three factors that influence pre-school aged children's learning of these words continues to influence older children's comprehension. Specifically, children's accuracy is improved when the events can be…
Descriptors: Children, Time, Comprehension, Language Processing
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Panagiota Margaza; Anna Gavarró – Second Language Research, 2024
Greek and Spanish are two languages that display a similar subject distribution with unergative/unaccusative verbs, but different word orders with focused subjects (SV in Greek and VS in Spanish). Here we consider subject-verb word order in second language (L2) Greek and L2 Spanish in order to test the Interface Hypothesis (IH). To this end, we…
Descriptors: Greek, Spanish, Second Language Instruction, Verbs
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Abdul Raziq Safi; Ehsanullah Pamir; Arifullah Haqparast – Journal of Research Initiatives, 2024
Language is a systematic means of communication that employs sound or conventional symbols. Using a foreign language can be problematic when attempting to communicate or translate written or spoken language from one's native language due to structural differences between languages. Among the most widely spoken languages in the world, English is…
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, English (Second Language), Indo European Languages, Form Classes (Languages)
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Layal Abboud; Lina Choueiri; Nour Seifeddine; Laurice Tuller – Journal of Child Language, 2024
In Lebanese Arabic, lexical subjects may occur before or after verbs, but only before non-verbal predicates. Analysis of spontaneous language samples from 19 two-year-old children shows that postverbal (VS) and preverbal (SV) subjects emerge simultaneously. The youngest children displayed no VS-SV difference in frequency. A slight preference for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Arabic, Toddlers, Language Acquisition
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Barbara May Bernhardt; Gabriela Raymond; Carmen Ávila; Pablo Cáceres Serrano; Gloria Carballo; Dolores Fresneda; Elvira Mendoza; Karen Hoang; Lydia Liu; Juana Muñoz; Denisse Pérez; Joseph P. Stemberger – Journal of Child Language, 2024
While consonant acquisition clearly requires mastery of different articulatory configurations (segments), sub-segmental features and suprasegmental contexts influence both order of acquisition and mismatch (error) patterns (Bérubé, Bernhardt, Stemberger & Ciocca, 2020). Constraints-based nonlinear phonology provides a comprehensive framework…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Language Acquisition, Monolingualism, Foreign Countries
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Ronai, Eszter; Xiang, Ming – Cognitive Science, 2023
Memory limitations and probabilistic expectations are two key factors that have been posited to play a role in the incremental processing of natural language. Relative clauses (RCs) have long served as a key proving ground for such theories of language processing. Across three self-paced reading experiments, we test the online comprehension of…
Descriptors: Memory, Expectation, Language Processing, Syntax
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Kehoe, Margaret; Philippart de Foy, Marie – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2023
Purpose: This study conducted a transcription-based and spectral moments' analysis of alveolar and alveopalatal fricatives in monolingual and bilingual Frenchs-peaking children, aged 2;6--6;10 (years;months). We measured the percent accuracy of fricatives and investigated whether young children could distinguish alveolar and alveopalatal…
Descriptors: French, Monolingualism, Bilingualism, Young Children
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