Abstract

There is a debate as to whether topic structures in Chinese involve A’-movement or result from base-generation of the topic in the left periphery. If Chinese topicalization was derived by movement, under the assumptions of Friedmann et al.’s Relativized Minimality (Lingua 119:67–88, 2009), we would expect children’s comprehension of object topicalization (with OSV order) to be worse than their comprehension of subject topicalization (with SVO order). This study examined 146 Mandarin-speaking children from age three to age six by means of a picture-sentence matching task with an appropriate context. The results showed a subject/object asymmetry when the topic marker is overt, and no asymmetry when the topic marker is covert. This suggests that the presence or absence of topic markers play an important role in children’s comprehension of topicalization. We propose that both structures involve movement in the adult grammar, but not in the child grammar, at least initially. Sentences without overt topic markers are base-generated on a par with gapless sentences with a topic, and the base-generation analysis is abandoned as soon as children learn the syntax and semantics of topic markers, which function as attractors of topics.

Highlights

  • Chinese has been claimed to be a topic-prominent language, distinguishing itself from many other subject-prominent languages, such as English (Li and Thompson 1976,J Psycholinguist Res (2018) 47:1279–13001981)

  • As we compared the results of two experiments, we found that the 3- and 4-year-old children’s comprehension of Chinese topicalization with an overt topic marker (Experiment 1) was significantly worse than that of Chinese topicalization without an overt topic marker (Experiment 2). As it is evident in Experiment 1, children comprehended significantly better subject topicalizations than object topicalizations when the topic marker is overt in the structure

  • There is a subject/object asymmetry on the acquisition of Chinese topicalization with an overt topic marker at 3 and 4 years of age. This contrasts with children’s performance on topicalizations without an overt topic marker in Experiment 2: the accurate rates of subject topicalizations were numerically higher than object topicalizations

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Summary

Introduction

Chinese has been claimed to be a topic-prominent language, distinguishing itself from many other subject-prominent languages, such as English (Li and Thompson 1976,J Psycholinguist Res (2018) 47:1279–13001981). Chinese has been claimed to be a topic-prominent language, distinguishing itself from many other subject-prominent languages, such as English We attempt to provide a picture of the comprehension of the Chinese topic structure, by focusing on the comparison between subject topicalization (with SVO order) and object topicalization (with OSV order), and by examining topicalization with and without an overt topic marker. This allows us to approach the Chinese topic structure from the acquisition perspective

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