Abstract
This present review paper will be investigating the topic of first language (L1) attrition, primarily concentrating on how this process is realized in first-generation immigrant children, meaning children who either were born in a country different than the one their parents were born in or foreign-born children whose parents immigrated when that person was very young. This angle is particularly interesting as this L1 attrition is simultaneously co-occurring with second language (L2) acquisition and is connected to a multitude of sociolinguistic factors, the most important of which is the concept of sociolinguistic prestige as well as the concept of age-based speech communities and how the members of these communities influence one another's speech. The main goal is to gain more insight into how first language attrition research has taken into account such complex social matters as well as understanding the effects social/cognitive factors like these have on children who are being exposed to more than one language in their everyday life. To further the understanding of the social component of L1 attrition, this paper presents a comparison between two examples of language policy, in Romania and in the Netherlands, concerning multilingualism in society as well as in education.
Highlights
1 Language attrition, generally defined as the process of losing a language, is one of the most multifaceted and complicated subjects that fall under the discipline of linguistics
To further the understanding of the social component of L1 attrition, this paper presents a comparison between two examples of language policy, in Romania and in the Netherlands, concerning multilingualism in society as well as in education
That changed during the nineties, when attrition research was first reaching widespread popularity, with a taxonomical classification system generally called the ‘van Els taxonomy ’(Köpke and Schmid 2004), where language loss was separated into four different phenomena that are studied under distinct frameworks
Summary
A Sociolinguistic Perspective on L1 Attrition in First-Generation Immigrant Children. Lydia Palaiologou Faculty of Humanities, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
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