Abstract

The article reports on an empirical study investigating the role of L1 at the initial and developmental stages of L2 speech production. It examines two types of Chinese verb- phrase-ellipsis, ΣP-ellipsis licensed by the auxiliary shi 'BE' and vP-ellipsis licensed by the other auxiliaries, in 45 English and 45 Korean adult speakers' L2 Chinese speech production. An elicited imitation task was administered to L2 learners at beginner, intermediate and advanced Chinese proficiency levels. L1 influence is not observed at beginner levels, but it appears at intermediate and advanced levels, L1 influence disappears at different time in English and Korean learners' oral production of verb-ellipsis and ΣP-ellipsis. It is proposed that the absence of L1 influence at beginner levels is due to a breakdown of syntax-stylistics interface and beginners' difficulty in implementing checking and deleting operations in their L2 oral production. The different timings of the disappearance of L1 influence in the two language groups at advanced levels is attributed to interactions between the persistence of L1 influence and the computational complexity involved in the target elliptical structures.

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