Abstract

Bilingualism has been a myth for linguists and language policy and planning professionals for decades. Current study observes morphological ability and bilingual profile of L1 and L2 of Pashto mother-tongue children. Bilingual profile of the participants measured through bilingual language profile (BLP) tool. Both L1 and L2 children were tested before and after intervention. Morphological ability was measured through 4 M model. After 4 weeks of intervention, experimental child was able to read and write complex words with bridge morphemes. In contrast, controlled sample was not exposed to the intervention. The participants performed assigned language tasks and their performance-expressions were analyzed. Study confirms that early and late bridge morphemes are acquired and children have intelligibility of the language despite the fact that BLP shows low profile of the mother tongue. Significant effects of mother tongue were recorded in the participants’ performance. Effects of explicit morphological instruction was focused on identifying Pashto orthography and applying morphological ability on word formations. Findings reveal bilingual profile and patterns of morphological ability after didactic practice of intervention. Intervention contributed in developing Pashto orthography that was crucial for reading and writing proficiency. Direct impact on text-based inference and reading comprehension was another milestone of this qusai-experimental research. This model can be used for longitudinal studies.

Highlights

  • English and Pashto are from Indo-European family of languages and have several similarities in morphological functions and forms when it comes to inflection

  • In terms of language acquisition, multilinguals have an edge on monolinguals when linguistic knowledge is compared. These findings further reveal complexity of grammars in bilingual and multilingual contacts where changing nature of grammars and evolving Matrix Language Frame (MLF) becomes challenging

  • The study aimed at identifying factors effecting morphological ability of Pashto-English bilinguals

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Summary

Introduction

English and Pashto are from Indo-European family of languages and have several similarities in morphological functions and forms when it comes to inflection. Both languages have Greek influence as their proto-language. Pashto stands in the category of morphologically-rich languages when compared with English (Khan et al, 2016). Given that current research and empirical data further provide evidence for a multilingual lexicon where components of each language are well adjusted for language production and comprehension (Miikkulainen & Kiran, 2009). A previous research indicated that the acquisition of morphosyntactic features decline in adults as compared to early language learners (Bosch & Clahsen, 2019)

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