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Child Syntax and Morphology

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1 Child Syntax and Morphology
Aylin Küntay Language and Communicative Disorders Meeting 4

2 Productivity/generativity of language
Syntactic productivity An infinite number of sentences from a finite list of lexical items (words) Morphological productivity “Wug” test (Berko) Need knowledge of SYNTAX or MORPHOSYNTAX to achieve productivity Component of grammar governing the ordering of words in sentences

3 Linguistic rules operate over...
Content words (lexical categories) vs. function words (functional categories) Bound vs. free morpheme inflectional vs. derivational morphology

4 Overview of grammatical development
Multi word utterances Morphosyntactic development in English MLU Negation, questions, etc. Passives Individual differences

5 Two-word utterances: Telegraphic speech
after a period of one-word utterances, children start putting words together to form the first sentences underlying relational meanings show evidence of syntax: the child combines words following certain rules rather than in random fashion more cereal, *cereal more with development, more linguistic elements measuring morphological and syntactic development: MLU (mean length of utterance) research finds that early word combinations express common semantic relations such as recurrence, disappearance, possession, agent-patient relations

6 Syntax: combinatorial language
MLU: used as an indicator of early syntactic development observed in 100 spontaneous speech utterances length is determined by the number of meaningful units, or morphemes include both content words such as dog, and function words such as the the addition of each new morpheme reflects the acquisition of new linguistic knowledge better indicator of the level of linguistic development than age, although positively correlated a lot of individual variation among children of the same age remains useful up to MLU = 4 IPSyn (Index of Productive Syntax): gives credit for a variety of structures in NPs, VPs, questions, negation forms, and sentence structure good correlation with MLU

7 Issues about using MLU imitation vs. spontaneous utterances: should we include imitated utterances in our calculations? highly inflected and synthetic languages such as German, Russian, and Turkish difficult to figure out what functions as a morpheme in the child’s system it is easy to obtain inflated numbers in some languages, calculating the length of utterances in words has proven useful

8 Acquisition of morphology
Brown: the 14 morphemes observed in 3 American children common order of acquisition: 1. present progressive, 2-3. prepositions in and on, 4. plural, 5. irregular past tense, 6. possessive, 7. uncontractibe copula, 8. articles, 9. regular past tense, 10. regular third-person present tense, 11. irregular third-person present tense , 12. uncontractible auxiliary, 13. contractible copula, 14. contractible auxiliary de Villiers & de Villiers: found the same order of development in a larger sample of 21 children

9 Reasons for this order frequency hypothesis: found no correlation between frequency in input and order of acquisition articles are very common in parents’ speech, but not in children’s linguistic complexity semantic complexity: the complexity of meanings encoded in the morpheme plural encodes number, 3rd person singular encodes number and tense syntactic complexity: the complexity of rules required for the morpheme

10 Productivity in morphology
Overregularization errors use the plural morpheme on irregular nouns such as mans, mouses use the past tense morpheme on irregular verbs such as broked, falled, goed evidence of the productivity of the child’s morphology the Wug test (Berko) an elicited production task in which children were shown novel creatures and actions that were given invented names

11 Morphological Rules Berko (the Wug test)
How do children know the pluralization rule? This is a Wug Now there is another one. There are two of them. These are two …?

12 Morphological Rules This is a Wug Now there is another one.
Berko (the Wug test) Do children know the English plural rule with segments (non-words) that they have never encountered before? Children do not memorize each plural but they have internalized a rule for it This is a Wug Now there is another one. There are two of them. These are two …?

13 Late developments: Passives
reverses the order of agents and objects can reveal info about children’s sensitivity to word order rules very rare in children’s transcripts full passives produced far less frequently than truncated passives such as in the window was broken Borer and Wexler: early appearing passives are really adjectival in form, whereas the later-appearing passives are complete verbal passives

14 Individual differences
Holistic vs. analytical strategies Most children use both

15 Comprehension studies
Before production? Sometimes, often... Response stragies No use of syntactic knowledge Evidence Preferential looking studies (see the next 2 slides) Word order Picture recognition stories with children not yet producing function words Find the dog for me vs. find was dog for me But even 5-year-olds have difficulties with sentences such as John promised Bill to go (long distance co-reference relations) (Carol Chomsky, 1969) indicating they use non-syntactic cues... But maybe they fail because of performance limitations although they have the adult-like grammar Syntactic competence vs. performance

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