Abstract

The paper reports two studies investigating children’s acquisition of the wh-adjunct zenme in Mandarin. Unlike other Mandarin wh-words that correspond to a single meaning, zenme can be used to question either the manner or the cause of an event. Study 1 explored whether children understand that zenme is ambiguous between a causal and a manner reading. Study 2 examined whether they can use syntactic cues to disambiguate the two readings. The findings show that children as young as 4 years of age access both the manner and the causal reading, but they prefer the former over the latter. Children exhibit a developmental trajectory when acquiring the mapping relations between the syntactic positions of zenme and its corresponding semantic interpretations: 5-year-olds can use syntactic cues to disambiguate the two readings; 3-year-olds, however, are still in the stage of working out how the syntactic positions are mapped onto the relevant semantic interpretations; the critical change occurs at around 4 years of age. The implications of the findings were then discussed in relation to the two major competing theories of child language acquisition.

Highlights

  • There are two major competing approaches to child language acquisition: the UG (Universal Grammar)-based approach and the usage-based approach

  • Experiment 1 was designed to see whether young Mandarinspeaking children understand that the wh-adjunct zenme is ambiguous between a causal reading and a manner reading

  • Experiment 2 examined whether young children are able to use the syntactic positions of zenme relative to modal verbs to disambiguate the two readings of zenme and whether children exhibit a developmental trajectory when acquiring the mapping relations between the syntactic positions of zenme and its corresponding semantic interpretations

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Summary

Introduction

There are two major competing approaches to child language acquisition: the UG (Universal Grammar)-based approach and the usage-based approach. The UG-based approach is based on the theory of Universal Grammar by Noam Chomsky (1965) This approach emphasizes the discrepancy between language input and the linguistic knowledge children acquire in the first few years of life. To account for the discrepancy, the UG-based approach proposes that children are born with some abstract linguistic knowledge that guides their language acquisition These innately specified linguistic constraints constitute the initial state of language acquisition, and form the basis on which knowledge of language develops (Chomsky, 1975, 1980). On this approach, sentences are hierarchically structured, and the interpretations that can be assigned to sentences are dependent on the abstract structural constraints. Children are expected to acquire language in a relatively rapid and effortless manner (Chomsky, 1980; Crain and Nakayama, 1987; Crain and Pietroski, 2001; Crain et al, 2017)

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