Publication | Closed Access
Rules, rote, and analogy in morphological formations by Hungarian children
224
Citations
10
References
1975
Year
NeurolinguisticsLanguage DevelopmentPsycholinguisticsMorphology (Linguistics)PhonologyLanguage LearningLinguistic TheoryApplied LinguisticsSecond Language AcquisitionCognitive LinguisticsChild LanguagePhoneticsLanguage AcquisitionHistorical LinguisticsGrammarLanguage StudiesCognitive ScienceMorphologyHungarian ChildrenMorphological LearningNonsense RootPhonology MorphologyLinguistics
ABSTRACT This study examines the relative contributions of rote-memorization, analogic formation and rule-operation in the production of plurals by Hungarian children. In order to maximize analogic formations, each of fifteen actual roots was matched to a rhyming nonsense root. The elicited plural responses were characterized in terms of five stages of morphological learning. The importance of rule-operation as an explanation of word formation was evidenced by the fact that children producing responses characteristic of a given stage did not produce responses for later stages. The contribution of analogic formation was seen to be minimal and the effect of rote-memorization only somewhat greater.
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