GRAMMATICAL AND CONCEPTUAL FORCES IN THE ATTRIBUTION OF GENDER BY ENGLISH AND SPANISH SPEAKERS

被引:101
|
作者
SERA, MD [1 ]
BERGE, CAH [1 ]
PINTADO, JD [1 ]
机构
[1] COMCQPLUTENSE UNIV MADRID,MADRID,SPAIN
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0885-2014(94)90007-8
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
We compared the assignment of gender to masculine and feminine pictured objects-as classified by the Spanish grammar-by English- and Spanish-speaking children and adults in three experiments. Across all three studies, subjects participated in one of two conditions. In one condition, pictures alone were presented; in the other condition, pictures were shown and labeled. We found that speakers of Spanish began to classify the objects according to the grammatical gender of the Spanish language in the second grade, unlike speakers of English. The effect of grammatical gender was more pronounced for speakers of Spanish when the objects were labeled, pointing specifically to the role of language in their classifications. We also found that English speakers were consistent in their judgments, often classifying artificial objects as male-like and natural objects as female-like. Spanish speakers were also sensitive to the natural-female/artificial-male conceptual division. Finally, we found that the artificial-male/natural-female link was an earlier force in classification for speakers of English than grammatical gender was for speakers of Spanish, suggesting that grammatical classifications are superimposed on conceptual ones in development.
引用
收藏
页码:261 / 292
页数:32
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Assignment of grammatical gender by native speakers and foreign learners of French
    Holmes, VM
    De la Bâtie, BD
    [J]. APPLIED PSYCHOLINGUISTICS, 1999, 20 (04) : 479 - 506
  • [22] English Speakers' Implicit Gender Concepts Influence Their Processing of French Grammatical Gender: Evidence for Semantically Mediated Cross-Linguistic Influence
    Nicoladis, Elena
    Westbury, Chris
    Foursha-Stevenson, Cassandra
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 12
  • [23] Transfer of Spanish grammatical gender to English: Evidence from immersed and non-immersed bilinguals
    Morales, Luis
    Paolieri, Daniela
    Cubelli, Roberto
    Teresa Bajo, M.
    [J]. BILINGUALISM-LANGUAGE AND COGNITION, 2014, 17 (04) : 700 - 708
  • [24] Adjectives in Spanish/English code-switching Avoidance of grammatical gender in bi/multilingual speech
    Balam, Osmer
    Couto, Maria del Carmen Parafita
    [J]. SPANISH IN CONTEXT, 2019, 16 (02) : 194 - 216
  • [25] Grammatical gender in spoken word recognition in school-age Spanish monolingual and Spanish-English bilingual children
    Baron, Alisa
    Connell, Katrina
    Kleinman, Daniel
    Bedore, Lisa M.
    Griffin, Zenzi M.
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 15
  • [26] ENGLISH-DICTIONARY FOR SPANISH SPEAKERS - SPANISH - VIANNA,FD
    ORTEGA, J
    [J]. MODERN LANGUAGE JOURNAL, 1984, 68 (02): : 191 - 191
  • [27] The neural correlates of grammatical gender decisions in Spanish
    Hernandez, AE
    Kotz, SA
    Hofmann, J
    Valentin, VV
    Dapretto, M
    Bookheimer, S
    [J]. NEUROREPORT, 2004, 15 (05) : 863 - 866
  • [28] Teaching grammatical gender in spanish as a second language
    Zuluaga Jaramillo, Luz Stella
    [J]. SOPHIA-EDUCACION, 2016, 12 (02): : 207 - 215
  • [29] Grammatical gender processing in Italian and Spanish bilinguals
    Paolieri, Daniela
    Cubelli, Roberto
    Macizo, Pedro
    Bajo, Teresa
    Lotto, Lorella
    Job, Remo
    [J]. QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2010, 63 (08): : 1631 - 1645
  • [30] Variation of the grammatical category of Venezuelan spanish gender
    Guirigay C, Valentina V.
    [J]. LENGUA Y HABLA, 2011, 15 : 169 - 179