Abstract

Children’s difficulties with dependencies involving movement of an object to the left periphery of the clause (object relative clauses/RCs and wh-questions), have been explained in terms of intervention effects arising when the moved object and the intervening subject share a lexical N feature (Friedmann, Belletti & Rizzi 2009). Such an account raises various questions: (1) Do these effects hold in the absence of a lexical N feature when the object and the intervener share other relevant features? (2) Do phi-features with a semantic role modulate such effects? (3) Does the degree of feature overlap determine a gradience in performance? We addressed these in three sentence-picture matching studies with French-speaking children (4;8 to 6;3), by assessing comprehension of (1) subject and object RCs headed by the demonstrative pronouns celui/celle and matching or mismatching in number; (2) object RCs headed by a lexical N and matching or mismatching in animacy; (3) object who- and which-questions. Our results show that mismatches in number, not in animacy, enhance comprehension of object RCs, even in the absence of a lexical N feature, and confirm previous findings that object who-questions yield better comprehension than object which-questions. Comparing across studies, the following gradation emerges with respect to performance accuracy: disjunction > intersection > inclusion. The global interpretation of these findings is that fine-grained phi-features determining movement are both sufficient and necessary for locality, and the degree of overlap of these features can capture the pattern of performance observed in children, namely higher accuracy as featural differences increase.

Highlights

  • Amongst the tasks faced by the child during acquisition, there is the task of building structural representations as well as establishing dependencies within these representations, both of which can be complex (Jakubowicz 2005)

  • The results indicate that children gave more accurate responses to subject relative clauses (SRC) (M = 81%) as compared to object relative clauses (ORC) (M = 67%) in the number match condition

  • 3.2.2 Results The results of Study 2 reveal similar response accuracy rates for object relative clauses matching (M = 60%) or mismatching (M = 64%) in animacy (Figure 6). This was confirmed by the statistical analysis which showed that the main effect of Animacy (Match vs Mismatch) was not significant (p = .614) and that Age, which was used as a continuous variable in the model, did not impact comprehension

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Summary

Introduction

Amongst the tasks faced by the child during acquisition, there is the task of building structural representations as well as establishing dependencies within these representations, both of which can be complex (Jakubowicz 2005). Contributions by Friedmann et al and De Lisser et al (this volume) explore the relevance of Cartography and Truncation for the acquisition of structure, and here we turn to RM, which deals with dependencies derived by moving a constituent to the left periphery. Children understand and produce object relative clauses (ORC) and object whichquestions (OWH) (1) later than subject relative clauses (SRC) and subject which-questions (SWH) (2) (English: Brown 1971; De Villiers et al 1979; French: Labelle 1990; Portuguese: Corrêa 1995; Spanish: Pérez-Leroux 1995; German: Adani et al 2013; Italian: Contemori & Belletti 2014; Chinese: Hu et al 2016) In these and subsequent examples, an underline is used to indicate the gap corresponding to the canonical position of the fronted element

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