Abstract

Taking an onomasiological approach and a dynamic usage-based perspective, this study explores how four beginning L2 learners of Finnish develop in expressing existentiality (‘there is something somewhere’) before and after instruction. Data were collected weekly over a period of nine months and examined for conventionalized and non-conventionalized constructions that express existentiality. As expected from a dynamic usage-based perspective, both inter-individual variation and intra-individual variability were identified. The initial repertoires of two of the learners were quite variable, as they used several different non-conventionalized constructions before settling on more conventionalized ones. In contrast, the two other learners did not independently try out different ways of expressing the targeted meaning but started to use the conventionalized Finnish existential construction only after pedagogical intervention. As one would expect from a usage-based perspective, some learners’ initial repertoires included some item-based constructions that were similar to each other. As far as instruction is concerned, for all learners there was an increase in the use of the conventionalized construction after an explicit intervention, but the use was not morphologically accurate. The findings confirm two commonly held hypotheses in dynamic systems approaches: Learners own their own learning trajectories and initial trajectories are sometimes characterized by high degrees of variability because learners need to try out different strategies before they can adapt to the requirements of the new situation.

Highlights

  • In Finnish, for example, existentiality is such a case. It is conventionally expressed with the Finnish existential construction (FEC; e.g., Suomessa on paljon järviä ‘There are many lakes in Finland’), which is peculiar in many ways (e.g., Huumo, 2003; Ivaska, 2010; Kajander, 2013)

  • We focus on the individual developmental processes by taking a dynamic usage-based (DUB) approach and investigate the effect of teaching FECs

  • The aim of this study was to investigate what linguistic means four beginning-level learners of Finnish used to express the meaning that is conventionally expressed with an existential construction in Finnish

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Summary

Introduction

Before any pedagogical intervention, learners may want to express this meaning, and so they need to rely on creative linguistic solutions that may not be conventionalized in the target-language speaking community. A beginning L2 Finnish learner may not yet have noticed or acquired the form of this construction and may use creative linguistic solutions to express a similar meaning (e.g., *Se on paljon järviä Suomessa ‘*It is many lakes in Finland’). To investigate such learner language constructions, it is useful to take an onomasiological approach

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