Telic为谁?词汇不规范假说

IF 0.5 3区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
Stefano Rastelli
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引用次数: 0

摘要

体向假说(AH)认为,第二语言初学者首先将完成语素用于远距谓词(如“到达”、“建造房子”),然后才用于远距谓词(如“知道”、“工作”)。相反,词汇不规范假说(Lexical Underspecification Hypothesis, LUH)认为初学者不能表达第二语言谓词的词汇方面(因此有telic和atelic的区别),因为这种区别是动词意义的一个独立组成部分。为了探究二语学习者是否能区分远距式和远距式谓语,本研究比较了299名具有不同母语背景的意大利语二语学习者和91名母语人士对“for/in +时间跨度”状语测试的反应(Dowty 1979)。分析表明,本族语学习者和二语学习者对状语测试的反应存在显著差异,学习者的熟练程度和(在较小程度上)母语影响了他们的评分。结果表明,母语使用者和初中级L2学习者可能表现出不同的远性,要么是因为L2方面的能力仍在发展,要么是因为初学者依赖于他们的L1的语义表征。这些发现支持LUH的预测,并建议在试图评估学习者的方面表征时要谨慎。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Telic for whom? The Lexical Underspecification Hypothesis
Abstract The Aspect Hypothesis (AH) claims that L2 beginners use the perfective morpheme first with telic predicates (e.g., ‘arrive’, ‘build the house’) and only later with atelic ones (e.g., ‘know’, ‘work’). In contrast, the Lexical Underspecification Hypothesis (LUH) claims that beginners cannot represent the lexical aspect of L2 predicates (hence the telic vs. atelic distinction), because this distinction is a separate component of verb meaning. To investigate whether L2 learners distinguish between telic and atelic predicates, this study compares the responses from 299 L2 Italian learners (with different L1 backgrounds) and responses from 91 native speakers (NS) to the “for/in + time span” adverbial test (Dowty 1979). The analysis shows that native speakers and L2 learners’ responses to the adverbial test diverge significantly, with learners’ proficiency and – to a lesser extent – L1 modulating their ratings. The results suggest that native speakers and beginning-intermediate L2 learners might not represent telicity alike, either because L2 aspectual competence is still developing or because beginning learners rely on the semantic representations of their L1. These findings support the predictions of the LUH and suggest caution when trying to assess learners’ aspectual representations.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
30
期刊介绍: The Canadian Journal of Linguistics publishes articles of original research in linguistics in both English and French. The articles deal with linguistic theory, linguistic description of natural languages, phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, historical linguistics, sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics, first and second language acquisition, and other areas of interest to linguists.
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