The role of pronouns in young children's acquisition of the English transitive construction. |
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Authors: | J B Childers M Tomasello |
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Affiliation: | Department of Developmental and Comparative Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. jane.childers@trinity.edu |
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Abstract: | Two studies investigating the linguistic representations underlying English-speaking 2 1/2-year-olds' production of transitive utterances are reported. The first study was a training study in which half the children heard utterances with full nouns as agent and patient, and half the children heard utterances with both pronouns (i.e., He's [verb]-ing it) and also full nouns. In subsequent testing, only children who had been trained with pronouns and nouns were able to produce a transitive utterance creatively with a nonce verb. The second study reported an analogous set of findings, but in comprehension. Together, the results of these 2 studies suggest that English-speaking children build many of their early linguistic constructions around certain specific lexical or morphological items and patterns, perhaps especially around particular pronoun configurations. |
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