The acquisition of the passive voice in Northern East Cree

IF 1.2 2区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
Ryan E. Henke, Julie Brittain, Kamil U. Deen, Sara Acton
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Abstract

This article analyzes the acquisition of the passive voice in Northern East (NE) Cree and pays particular attention to the interaction of frequency effects and language-specific cues in the way children form and employ expectations, the process of anticipating oncoming structure in the ambient language. The passive has long been of interest in first-language acquisition, and expectations may play a role in the reported challenges acquiring the passive in languages such as English. We present two studies analyzing approximately 24 hours of naturalistic video recordings involving one adult and two children: Daisy (age 3;08–5;11) and Billy (4;06–5;10). Study 1 examines the passive voice in child-directed speech (CDS). CDS employs passive verbs frequently, at rates much higher than what has been reported for other languages. Passives also typically occur without overt arguments and most often are derived from verbs with two animate participants. Study 2 traces the acquisition of the passive by Daisy and Billy. Daisy demonstrates productivity with all three passive suffixes by age 3;11. Billy’s recordings begin at a later age, and he shows productivity with suffixes -naaniu at 4;06, -ikiwi at 4;10, and -ikiniw at 5;05. Both children produce passives at rates much higher than what has been reported in child speech for other languages. They also most frequently produce passives without overt arguments, and they show no difficulties passivizing verbs with two animate arguments. These results expand the typological purview of passives research and shed additional light on the role of expectations in acquiring the passive voice. The combination of high frequency and particular structural characteristics for the passive voice in Cree CDS allows children to build expectations differing greatly from those of children acquiring languages such as English. In turn, children acquiring NE Cree do not show the same difficulties in acquiring the passive voice.
东北克里语被动语态的习得
本文分析了东北克里语被动语态的习得,并特别关注了频率效应和语言特定线索在儿童形成和使用期望的方式中的相互作用,即在环境语言中预测即将到来的结构的过程。被动语在母语习得中一直受到关注,而期望可能在英语等语言中习得被动语的挑战中发挥了作用。我们提出了两项研究,分析了一名成人和两名儿童:Daisy(3岁;08-5岁;11岁)和Billy(4岁;06-5岁;10岁)大约24小时的自然录像。研究1探讨了儿童导向语(CDS)中的被动语态。CDS经常使用被动语态,使用频率远高于其他语言。被动语态通常也没有明显的论点,通常由两个有生命的参与者的动词衍生而来。研究2追溯了黛西和比利对被动语态的习得。黛西在3岁或11岁时就能熟练使用这三个被动后缀了。比利的录音开始于较晚的年龄,他在4、06、4、10和5、05时都有后缀-naaniu、-ikiwi和- ikiiniw。这两个孩子产生被动语态的速度都比其他语言的孩子要高得多。他们也经常在没有明显论据的情况下产生被动语态,而且他们毫不费力地用两个有生气的论据来钝化动词。这些结果扩大了被动语态研究的类型学范围,并进一步阐明了期望在被动语态习得中的作用。Cree cd中被动语态的高频率和特殊结构特征的结合使儿童能够建立与学习英语等语言的儿童截然不同的期望。反过来,习得新英语的儿童在习得被动语态时没有表现出同样的困难。
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来源期刊
First Language
First Language Multiple-
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
10.50%
发文量
53
期刊介绍: First Language is an international peer reviewed journal that publishes the highest quality original research in child language acquisition. Child language research is multidisciplinary and this is reflected in the contents of the journal: research from diverse theoretical and methodological traditions is welcome. Authors from a wide range of disciplines - including psychology, linguistics, anthropology, cognitive science, neuroscience, communication, sociology and education - are regularly represented in our pages. Empirical papers range from individual case studies, through experiments, observational/ naturalistic, analyses of CHILDES corpora, to parental surveys.
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