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The role of explicit contrast in adjective acquisition: a cross-linguistic longitudinal study of adjective production in spontaneous child speech and parental input
- Source :
- First Language, no. 33, pp. 594-616, University of Vienna-u:cris
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Experimental studies demonstrate that contrast helps toddlers to extend the meanings of novel adjectives. This study explores whether antonym co-occurrence in spontaneous speech also has an effect on adjective use by the child. The authors studied adjective production in longitudinal speech samples from 16 children (16–36 months) acquiring eight different languages. Adjectives in child speech and child-directed speech were coded as either unrelated or related to a contrastive term in the preceding context. Results show large differences between children in the growth of adjective production. These differences are strongly related to contrast use. High contrast users not only increase adjective use earlier, but also reach a stable level of adjective production in the investigated period. Average or low contrast users increase their adjective production more slowly and do not reach a plateau in the period covered by this study. Initially there is a strong relation between contrast use in child speech and child-directed speech, but this relation diminishes with age.
- Subjects :
- Linguistics and Language
Longitudinal study
Indo-European languages
adjective production
antonymy
contrast
cross-linguistic
growth curve analysis
Contrast (statistics)
Context (language use)
Language acquisition
Language and Linguistics
Linguistics
Education
Computational linguistics
Psychology
Adjective
Contrastive linguistics
Cognitive psychology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- First Language, no. 33, pp. 594-616, University of Vienna-u:cris
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....369b7be6848394714e4a2e6fe56a411a