Subject-verb agreement in German in bilingual children with and without SLI
We investigated the acquisition of subject-verb agreement (SVA) in German based on spontaneous speech data from both typically developing (TD) and language-impaired (SLI) children learning German as a second language (L2), and from language-impaired monolingual children. Rothweiler et al. (2012) sug...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft 2017-06, Vol.36 (1), p.79-106 |
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Zusammenfassung: | We investigated the acquisition of subject-verb agreement (SVA) in German based on spontaneous speech data
from both typically developing (TD) and language-impaired (SLI) children learning German as a second language (L2),
and from language-impaired monolingual children. Rothweiler et al. (2012) suggested that SVA is
vulnerable in SLI. The intent of our study was to determine whether TD child L2 learners (cL2) in contrast to children
with SLI do not have difficulties with SVA. Many studies report that cL2 acquisition can differ from monolingual (L1)
acquisition and that the differences look similar to those of impaired L1 learners, which makes it difficult to distinguish
cL2 learners who have SLI from those who do not. If such similarities were to be found in the acquisition of SVA in the
two bilingual groups, SVA would be ruled out as a possible marker of SLI in cL2 learners. Three groups of children
were compared: six Turkish-German early cL2 learners without SLI, and twelve children with SLI – six monolingual
German children and six Turkish-German early cL2 learners. As in Rothweiler et al. (2012), all children
were advanced learners and were therefore expected to have acquired SVA. We found that the unimpaired early cL2
learners had indeed successfully acquired SVA. In contrast, neither the monolingual nor the bilingual children with SLI
succeeded in reliably producing correct SVA. |
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ISSN: | 0721-9067 1613-3706 |
DOI: | 10.1515/zfs-2017-0005 |