Abstract

The clause chain is an under-investigated complex sentence type, found in hundreds of languages. In a clause chain, as many as 20 or more ‘medial’ clauses with under-specified verbal predicates combine with a single ‘final’ clause with fully-specified verbal predicate. Clause chains are of interest for three main reasons: (a) the special syntactic relationship between clauses, which is neither textbook subordination nor coordination; (b) the potential extreme length of a single chain; and (c) switch-reference marking in clause chains of some languages could require speakers to plan at least one clause ahead as they speak. Research on child production of complex sentences has largely overlooked clause chains. Longitudinal data for three children aged 1;1 to 3;3 acquiring the Papuan language Nungon show that Nungon-speaking children begin producing clause chains around the age of 2;4, with a marked increase in rate of use around age 2;11. Chain length is limited to two clauses until age 3;1. Different-subject marking in medial clauses is used by all three children early, but is first attested in one-clause, ‘root medial’ contexts, rather than in chains. Bayesian statistical models confirm the strong tendency for children to use root medials in expressions of desires and commands. Children’s production of three types of complex sentences—clause chains, subordinated final clauses, and coordinated final clauses—is shown to be subject to the same type of developmental constraint; but once development reaches an adequate level for increased complex sentence production, children acquiring Nungon produce many more clause chains than complex sentences involving subordinated or coordinated final clauses.

Highlights

  • Specialty section: This article was submitted to Language Sciences, a section of the journal Frontiers in PsychologyReceived: 15 November 2019 Accepted: 02 June 2020 Published: 07 July 2020Citation: Sarvasy HS (2020) The Acquisition of Clause Chaining in Nungon

  • This paper investigates child acquisition of the special type of complex sentence known as ‘clause chains’ in the Papuan language Nungon

  • The present dataset comes from a larger longitudinal study of five children acquiring the Towet village dialect of Nungon in a village setting; more information on the larger study is on its CHILDES page, https://childes.talkbank.org/access/Other/ Nungon/Sarvasy.html (MacWhinney, 2000)

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Summary

Introduction

Specialty section: This article was submitted to Language Sciences, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology. Received: 15 November 2019 Accepted: 02 June 2020 Published: 07 July 2020. This paper investigates child acquisition of the special type of complex sentence known as ‘clause chains’ in the Papuan language Nungon. Acquisition of clause chains is compared with that of subordinate clauses and coordinate clauses, and usage patterns are compared with those in childdirected speech. This section introduces clause chains in Nungon and the motivation for targeting their acquisition by children

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