Publication | Closed Access
Present tense verb morphology of Spanish HL and L2 children in dual immersion
56
Citations
35
References
2019
Year
Second Language LearningL2 ChildrenMultilingualismLanguage DevelopmentAtypical Language DevelopmentPsycholinguisticsBilingual Language DevelopmentMorphology (Linguistics)Cross-language PerspectiveLanguage LearningLanguage ProficiencySecond Language AcquisitionSyntaxSpanish Second Language AcquisitionChild LanguageLanguage AcquisitionCognitive DevelopmentSchool-age LanguageBilingualismGrammarLanguage StudiesDual ImmersionHealth SciencesSl2 ChildrenHeritage Language AcquisitionSpanish Heritage LanguageBilingual EducationLanguage DisorderSpanish HlChildhood Morphology DevelopmentLanguage ScienceLanguage ComprehensionForeign Language AcquisitionSpanishLinguistics
Abstract We provide a snapshot of childhood morphology development in our investigation of two profiles of bilinguals (age 9–10) in an English-Spanish dual immersion academic setting: Spanish heritage language (SHL, n = 21) and second language (SL2, n = 41) children. Three tasks were given to the 62 bilinguals and 15 age-matched controls (Spanish first language, SL1): oral comprehension of 20 singular-plural present verbs, written sentence production of 10 similar verbs, and a meaning-focused writing task. SHL children were comparable to controls in production of number agreement, and showed no asymmetry between comprehension and production. SL2 learners showed lower accuracy than both SHL and SL1 children. A similar pattern was observed when person agreement and tense, aspect, mood and vowel errors were considered. The most common error among SHL and SL2 children was overregularization of stem vowels, a typical developmental error. The Feature Reassembly model of grammar can accommodate the range of possibilities represented by the data we present.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1