The acquisition of past tense morphology in Icelandic and Norwegian children: an experimental study
Icelandic and Norwegian past tense morphology contain strong patterns of inflection and two weak patterns of inflection. We report the results of an elicitation task that tests Icelandic and Norwegian children's knowledge of the past tense forms of a representative sample of verbs. This cross-s...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of child language 1999-10, Vol.26 (3), p.577-618 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Icelandic and Norwegian past tense morphology contain strong patterns
of inflection and two weak patterns of inflection. We report the results
of an elicitation task that tests Icelandic and Norwegian children's
knowledge of the past tense forms of a representative sample of verbs.
This cross-sectional study of four-, six- and eight-year-old Icelandic
(n=92) and Norwegian (n=96) children systematically manipulates
verb characteristics such as type frequency, token frequency and
phonological coherence – factors that are generally considered to have
an important impact on the acquisition of inflectional morphology in
other languages. Our findings confirm that these factors play an
important role in the acquisition of Icelandic and Norwegian. In
addition, the results indicate that the predominant source of errors in
children shifts during the later stages of development from one weak
verb class to the other. We conclude that these findings are consistent
with the view that exemplar-based learning, whereby patterns of
categorization and generalization are driven by similarity to known
forms, appropriately characterizes the acquisition of inflectional systems
by Icelandic and Norwegian children. |
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ISSN: | 0305-0009 1469-7602 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0305000999003918 |