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引用次数: 1
摘要
本文在可处理性理论(PT)的背景下,介绍了一项关于冰岛语作为第二语言的格分配发展的研究结果,并将其与以往关于第二语言德语、俄语和塞尔维亚语格分配的研究进行了比较。我们认为,最初,学习者只能在规范位置适当地标记主体和对象(例如,subjnom v objacc)。后来,他们还能够在偏离规范语序的句子中用适当的大小写标记论点(例如,objacc/dat v subjnom)。为了研究冰岛语二语的格发展,148名学习者被要求填补核心论点缺失的句子空白。我们的研究结果在很大程度上复制了之前对L2德语、俄语和塞尔维亚语的研究结果。因此,本研究增加了PT作为预测和解释发育序列的框架的类型学合理性。
A processability approach to the development of case in L2 Icelandic
This article presents the findings of a study on the development of case assignment in Icelandic as a second
language within the context of Processability Theory (PT) and compares them with previous PT studies on the development of case in
L2 German, Russian, and Serbian. We argue that initially, learners are only able to appropriately mark subjects and objects in
canonical positions (e.g., subjnom v objacc
). Later they are also able to mark arguments with the
appropriate case in sentences that deviate from canonical word order (e.g., objacc/dat v subjnom
).
In order to examine the case development in L2 Icelandic, 148 learners were asked to fill in the blanks of sentences with missing
core arguments. Our results replicate for the most part the previous findings for L2 German, Russian, and Serbian. As such, the
present study adds to the typological plausibility of PT as a framework that predicts and explains developmental sequences.
期刊介绍:
LIA is a bilingual English-French journal that publishes original theoretical and empirical research of high scientific quality at the forefront of current debates concerning language acquisition. It covers all facets of language acquisition among different types of learners and in diverse learning situations, with particular attention to oral speech and/or to signed languages. Topics include the acquisition of one or more foreign languages, of one or more first languages, and of sign languages, as well as learners’ use of gestures during speech; the relationship between language and cognition during acquisition; bilingualism and situations of linguistic contact – for example pidginisation and creolisation. The bilingual nature of LIA aims at reaching readership in a wide international community, while simultaneously continuing to attract intellectual and linguistic resources stemming from multiple scientific traditions in Europe, thereby remaining faithful to its original French anchoring. LIA is the direct descendant of the French-speaking journal AILE.