Abstract

Students have been found to improve their sociolinguistic competence, particularly regarding the acquisition of dialectal features, while studying abroad. Nevertheless, most of the research on learner development of morphosyntactic features in Spanish-speaking immersion contexts has examined that of variants characteristic of Peninsular Spanish in Spain, namely clitics and the informal second-person plural vosotros. Since the informal second-person singular, vos, is more prevalent than its equivalent, tú, in several Latin American countries, learner acquisition of this feature also merits investigation. This article explores second-language learner production of vos among 23 English speakers during a 5-month semester in Buenos Aires, Argentina, a popular study abroad destination. The findings from the multivariate analysis of over 1200 tokens of tú and vos indicate that learners used vos verb forms over 70% of the time by the end of the sojourn. Factors including social networks, proficiency level, mood, and task significantly influenced this use. Most notably, the stronger the learners’ social networks, the more they used vos verb forms and learners with high proficiency levels used these forms more than lower-proficiency learners. This study provides one of the first accounts of the acquisition of a widespread morphosyntactic feature of Latin American Spanish.

Highlights

  • This research shows that L2 learners incorporate sociolinguistic features into their interlanguage, they do so less than native speakers (NSs), and their usage patterns vary depending on the features, social factors, and the individual learner

  • Results of studies on Type 2 variation show that learner interlanguage is highly systematic and influenced by linguistic and extralinguistic factors; constraints on L2 speech may differ from those that operate on NS speech and might change over time based on proficiency level and contact with NSs (Geeslin and Long 2014)

  • The social network strength scale (SNSS) has been widely used in sociolinguistic work, adapted for use in an study abroad (SA) context (Kennedy 2012; Kennedy Terry 2017), and modified for use in this study in order to better understand the role of social networks in L2 acquisition of vos verb forms

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Summary

Introduction

Learners that have acquired sociolinguistic competence are able to adjust their speech based on their interlocutor, geographic location, and context to produce appropriate language that aligns with the interlocutor’s expectations and with their own communicative goals (Geeslin and Long 2014). As such, it is widely believed among second language acquisition (SLA) scholars that sociolinguistic competence is necessary for effective communication in the target language (TL). This research shows that L2 learners incorporate sociolinguistic features into their interlanguage, they do so less than native speakers (NSs), and their usage patterns vary depending on the features, social factors, and the individual learner

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