A corpus study of child heritage speakers' Spanish gender agreement

被引:20
|
作者
Goebel-Mahrle, Thomas [1 ]
Shin, Naomi L. [2 ]
机构
[1] Indiana Univ, Hispan Linguist, Bloomington, IN USA
[2] Univ New Mexico, Linguist & Hispan Linguist, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA
关键词
Heritage speakers; bilingualism; US Spanish; gender agreement; GRAMMATICAL GENDER; ACQUISITION; BILINGUALISM;
D O I
10.1177/1367006920935510
中图分类号
H0 [语言学];
学科分类号
030303 ; 0501 ; 050102 ;
摘要
Objectives: This study investigates (a) whether child heritage speakers produce more gender mismatches in Spanish (un piedra"a-masc. stone-fem.") than monolingual children, (b) whether older child heritage speakers mismatch more than younger ones, and (c) linguistic contexts in which mismatches occur. Methodology: 3893 agreement forms were extracted from corpora of Spanish spoken by six monolingual children, ages 5-6 years, and three groups of US child heritage speakers: ten 5-6-year-olds, fifteen 7-8-year-olds, and twenty-one 9-11-year-olds. Data and analysis: Logistic regressions measured the impact of agreement form type, noun gender, noncanonical noun ending, and noun frequency on gender matching. One regression included 5-6-year-olds only (monolingual and heritage); the second included child heritage speakers only (5-11-year-olds). Findings: There were no significant differences between monolingual and heritage 5-6-year-olds; for these children, adjectives, direct object clitics, noncanonical nouns, and feminine nouns increased the likelihood of mismatches. Among the 5-11-year-old heritage speakers, direct object clitics referring to feminine nouns and noncanonical nouns increased the likelihood of mismatches. The 9-11-year-olds produced more gender mismatches referring to feminine nouns than the younger child heritage speakers, especially with direct object clitics. Originality: This corpus study provides evidence for high rates of gender matching and clarifies the contexts that increase the likelihood that children will mismatch. Implications: Gender matching remains an intact part of child heritage speakers' Spanish grammars. The distribution of mismatches found provides evidence of a strong article-noun association and a weaker noun-direct object clitic association. The oldest child heritage speakers' use of masculine cliticloto refer to feminine nouns may reflect an association between English "it" and Spanishlo.More generally, the finding that mismatches tend to involve masculine forms referring to feminine nouns supports the idea that masculine is the default, unmarked form in Spanish.
引用
收藏
页码:1088 / 1104
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Heritage Speakers of Spanish and Study Abroad
    Von Streber, Guilherme
    HISPANIA-A JOURNAL DEVOTED TO THE TEACHING OF SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE, 2022, 105 (03): : 476 - 477
  • [12] Differential Object Marking in Child and Adult Spanish Heritage Speakers
    Montrul, Silvina
    Sanchez-Walker, Noelia
    LANGUAGE ACQUISITION, 2013, 20 (02) : 109 - 132
  • [13] The Distribution of Manner and Frequency Adverbs in Child Heritage Speakers of Spanish
    Alzate, Edier Gomez
    Cuza, Alejandro
    Camacho, Jose
    Zanelli, Dafne
    LANGUAGES, 2024, 9 (01)
  • [14] Gender in Unilingual and Mixed Speech of Spanish Heritage Speakers in The Netherlands
    Boers, Ivo
    Sterken, Bo
    van Osch, Brechje
    Couto, M. Carmen Parafita
    Grijzenhout, Janet
    Tat, Deniz
    LANGUAGES, 2020, 5 (04) : 1 - 35
  • [15] GENDER ASSIGNMENT AND AGREEMENT IN THE ORAL PRODUCTION OF HERITAGE SPEAKERS OF ITALIAN LIVING IN GERMANY
    Di Pisa, Grazia
    Marinis, Theodoros
    LINGUE E LINGUAGGIO, 2022, 21 (01) : 99 - 120
  • [16] Copulas ser and estar production in child and adult heritage speakers of Spanish
    Cuza, Alejandro
    Reyes, Nancy
    Lustres, Eduardo
    LINGUA, 2021, 249
  • [17] Child heritage speakers' acquisition of the Spanish subjunctive in volitional and adverbial clauses
    Dracos, Melisa
    Requena, Pablo E.
    LANGUAGE ACQUISITION, 2023, 30 (01) : 1 - 28
  • [18] An Exploratory Study of the Effect of Spanish Immersion Education on the Acquisition of Pronominal Subjects in Child Heritage Speakers
    Goldin, Michele
    LANGUAGES, 2020, 5 (02) : 1 - 24
  • [19] Heritage speakers' processing of the Spanish subjunctive A pupillometric study
    Lopez-Beltran, Priscila
    Dussias, Paola E.
    LINGUISTIC APPROACHES TO BILINGUALISM, 2023,
  • [20] Noun canonicity in heritage speakers and monolingual speakers of spanish
    Mayans, Damaris
    ESTUDIOS DE LINGUISTICA-UNIVERSIDAD DE ALICANTE-ELUA, 2023, (39): : 63 - 84