Abstract

The article is dedicated to the study of strategies for determining the gender of nouns of the German language by Ukrainian-speaking first-year-students at the Yuriy Fedkovych National University of Chernivtsi, Ukraine. The purpose of the study is to establish the strategies for determining the gender of nouns on the basis of phonetic, morphological, and semantic criteria and experimentally trace the impact of interlingual and intralingual interference in the process of gender categorization of nouns. The material of the study included 60 nouns, out of which 30 were phonetic equivalents and 30 – semantic ones. Each group contained 10 nouns of the masculine, feminine and neuter gender respectively, with the same number of structurally different nouns among them, which were selected according to semantic, morphological, and phonetic rules of gender identification. To identify strategies for determining the gender of German nouns, two psycholinguistic experiments were held with a month interval. The experiments involved 30 first-year-students at the University of Chernivtsi (German department), who had to decide whether the noun gender specified in DMDX program is correct. Thus, the article in half of the given nouns was set incorrectly in the program. The obtained results indicate that the gender of the noun of the native language significantly affects gender determining of the German phonetic equivalent (85% of all mistakes in determining the gender in Experiment 1 and 47% – in Experiment 2). The students also focus on the suffixes or endings of German nouns when choosing the correct gender. Phonetic or semantic rules for determining gender play a secondary role. The gender of a noun in the native language prevents the correct choice of the gender in the German language, which is twice as often recorded for phonetic equivalents.

Highlights

  • The grammatical category of gender, called by Köpcke (1982, p. 4-5) one of the least logical and most unpredictable categories, is a characteristic feature of the grammatical structure of almost all Indo-European languages

  • Previous studies on noun gender in German have focused on the printed word, highlighting the importance of semantics over morpho-phonological analogy in gender assignment to foreign nouns (Onysko et al 2013)

  • The results of two experiments indicate that the Ukrainian students of the Chernivtsi University (German department) are guided primarily by suffixes or endings of German nouns in choosing the correct gender

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Summary

Introduction

The grammatical category of gender, called by Köpcke (1982, p. 4-5) one of the least logical and most unpredictable categories, is a characteristic feature of the grammatical structure of almost all Indo-European languages. It is true that a lot of nouns in the German language may end the same, but belong to different genders, such as: der Mantel (masculine) – die Fabel (feminine) – das Mittel (neuter), der Junge (masculine) – die Rose (feminine) – das Auge (neuter). Most grammar guides recommend memorizing a noun at once with the appropriate article, which makes the study of gender in German a difficult and time-consuming process. This means that gender in German belongs to those grammatical categories that complicate the process of language learning, slow down the reproductive characteristics of speech and serve as an indicator for native speakers to recognize foreigners

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