Differences in the comprehension of passive voice in German- and English-speaking children

被引:8
|
作者
Aschermann, E [1 ]
Gülzow, I [1 ]
Wendt, D [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cologne, Inst Psychol, D-50931 Cologne, Germany
来源
SWISS JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY | 2004年 / 63卷 / 04期
关键词
comprehension of passive voice; preschool children; English speaking; German speaking; language acquisition; language specific development;
D O I
10.1024/1421-0185.63.4.235
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
This study tested the understanding of sentences in active and passive voice in 60 German and 46 British preschool children. In German and English passive sentences, the object of the active phrase appears in the topic position. Whereas the German language also allows active sentences with the object as topic, English nearly always requires the sequence subject-predicate-object. Participants listened to 24 active passive sentences that differed in plausibility (likely, neutral, or unlikely). Their understanding was tested by asking them to either choose a correct line drawing depicted the sentence or to act it out with dolls. Results showed no effect of the plausibility of an event. However, English children did not exhibit a full comprehension of passive until they were about 1 year older than German children. It is concluded that this is due largely to how the passive relates to the rest of a language's grammar.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:235 / 245
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Attitudes among German- and English-Speaking Librarians toward (Automatic) Subject Indexing
    Keller, Alice
    CATALOGING & CLASSIFICATION QUARTERLY, 2015, 53 (08) : 895 - 904
  • [2] The discourse bases of relativization: An investigation of young German and English-speaking children's comprehension of relative clauses
    Brandt, Silke
    Kidd, Evan
    Lieven, Elena
    Tomasello, Michael
    COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS, 2009, 20 (03) : 539 - 570
  • [3] The comprehension of verb agreement morphology by English-speaking children with specific language impairment
    Leonard, LB
    Miller, CA
    Owen, AJ
    CLINICAL LINGUISTICS & PHONETICS, 2000, 14 (06) : 465 - 481
  • [4] Dialect Awareness and Lexical Comprehension of Mainstream American English in African American English-Speaking Children
    Edwards, Jan
    Gross, Megan
    Chen, Jianshen
    MacDonald, Maryellen C.
    Kaplan, David
    Brown, Megan
    Seidenberg, Mark S.
    JOURNAL OF SPEECH LANGUAGE AND HEARING RESEARCH, 2014, 57 (05): : 1883 - 1895
  • [5] GRAMMATICAL DEFICITS IN PERSIAN AND ENGLISH-SPEAKING AUTISTIC CHILDREN: SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES
    Taghva, N.
    Mahabadi, S.
    EUROPEAN PSYCHIATRY, 2013, 28
  • [6] Respect for patient autonomy and the estimation of human dignity - Monitoring of anthropologic implications in German- and English-speaking debate of Bioethics
    Rolf, Sibylle
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR EVANGELISCHE ETHIK, 2008, 52 (03): : 200 - 211
  • [7] Passive Participle Marking by African American English-Speaking Children Reared in Poverty
    Pruitt, Sonja L.
    Oetting, Janna B.
    Hegarty, Michael
    JOURNAL OF SPEECH LANGUAGE AND HEARING RESEARCH, 2011, 54 (02): : 598 - 607
  • [8] No influence of regular rhythmic priming on grammaticality judgment and sentence comprehension in English-speaking children
    Kim, Hyun-Woong
    Mclaren, Katie E.
    Lee, Yune Sang
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 237
  • [9] Do case and gender information assist sentence comprehension and repetition for German- and Hebrew-speaking children?
    Biran, Michel
    Ruigendijk, Esther
    LINGUA, 2015, 164 : 215 - 238
  • [10] A valency dictionary for English-speaking learners of German
    Cornell, A
    Roe, I
    FROM CLASSICAL SHADES TO VICKERS VICTORIOUS: SHIFTING PERSPECTIVES IN BRITISH GERMAN STUDIES, 1999, : 153 - 170