Abstract

This study explored the order of acquisition of various types of syntactic-movement and embedding structures in Hebrew, using a sentence-repetition task, in which 60 children aged 2;2-3;10 repeated 80 sentences (with a total of 4800 sentences), and an analysis of the spontaneous speech of 61 children aged 1;6-6;1 (27,696 clauses). The sentence repetition task revealed a set order of acquisition of the various types of syntactic movement: A-movement is acquired first, then A-bar-movement, and finally movement of the verb to C. The analysis of spontaneous speech revealed the same order: A-movement of the object of unaccusative verbs to subject position appears first, together with simple SV sentences; then, wh-questions appear, then relative clauses and topicalization, which appear together with embedding of finite clauses, and lastly, V-to-C movement. Previous studies have shown that Hebrew speakers under age six have difficulty comprehending and producing sentences with A-bar-movement in which a lexically-restricted object crosses over a lexically-restricted subject. And indeed, whereas children produced A-bar structures very early (wh-questions from age 1;6, relative-clauses and topicalization from age 2;6), until age 5;8 these structures never included a lexical DP crossing over another lexical DP. Both tasks indicated that the order of structure acquisition is fixed, creating Guttman scales between structures, but different children acquire the same structure at very different ages. It seems that whereas the syntactic path and the stages of structure acquisition along it are constant between children, each child walks this path in their own pace.

Highlights

  • Young children at the early stages of language acquisition do not produce all syntactic structures existing in adult speech yet

  • Finite clauses can be embedded to a verb (e.g., “I think that the first rain is wonderful”), or to a noun (“The thought that it will rain tonight made me happy”). (Embedding to a noun may involve a relative clause, which we have already discussed in the A-bar section, here we focus only on embedding without A-bar movement.) Embedded clauses may be declarative or interrogative, and they may be complements of verbs or they may be adjuncts, functioning as a type of modifier or adjunct of the matrix clause

  • We further examined the order of acquisition of the various types of syntactic movement using analysis of spontaneous speech of children in various acquisition stages, by looking for all the structures of interest within the samples of each child, and exploring when each of the various syntactic structures appears in the speech samples

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Summary

Introduction

Young children at the early stages of language acquisition do not produce all syntactic structures existing in adult speech yet. Many studies explored the acquisition of various structures, but most of them studied the acquisition of a single structure. The current study was aimed to draw a broader picture of the relative order of acquisition of various structures in Hebrew, focusing on various movement structures and embedding. For this aim, we tested several types of syntactic structures together within the same children, and examined whether a consistent order of acquisition of the various structures can be identified across different children. Beyond the psycholinguistic contribution of learning what shapes stages of acquisition take, and what shapes stages of acquisition, such rich data can contribute to the identification of children who might be showing impaired acquisition of syntax and allow for early treatment

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