1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910808299803321

Titolo

The structure of learner varieties / / edited by Henriëtte Hendriks

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Berlin ; ; New York, : Mouton de Gruyter, c2005

ISBN

3-11-090959-6

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (528 p.)

Collana

Studies on language acquisition ; ; 28

Classificazione

ER 910

Altri autori (Persone)

HendriksHenriëtte <1962->

Disciplina

401/.93

Soggetti

Language acquisition

Language and languages - Variation

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Front matter -- Contents -- The Structure of Learner Varieties: Introduction to the volume / Hendriks, Henriëtte -- Part I: Referential movement -- Reference to persons and objects in the function of subject in Learner Varieties / Ahrenholz, Bernt -- Reference to person in learner discourse / Chini, Marina -- Structuring space in discourse: A comparison of Chinese, English, French and German LI and English, French and German L2 acquisition / Hendriks, Henriëtte -- Two dimensions of the representation of complex event structures: granularity and condensation. Towards a typology of textual production in LI and L2 / Noyau, Colette / Lorenzo, Cristina de / Kihlstedt, Maria / Paprocka, Urszula / Espinar, Gema Sanz / Schneider, Ricarda -- Cross-linguistic analysis of temporal perspectives in text production / Stutterheim, Christiane von / Lambert, Monique -- Determinants in first and second language acquisition: person, space, and time in discourse across languages / Hickmann, Maya -- Part II: Scope -- The semantic knowledge base for the acquisition of negation and the acquisition of finiteness / Becker, Angelika -- The acquisition of negation in Italian L2 / Bernini, Giuliano -- The acquisition of negation in French L2. An analysis of Moroccan Arabic and Spanish "learner varieties" / Giuliano, Patrizia / Véronique, Daniel -- Additive and Restrictive Particles in Italian as a Second Language. Embedding in the verbal utterance structure / Andorno, Cecilia -- Additive Scope Particles in Advanced Learner and Native Speaker Discourse / Watorek, Marzena / Dimroth, Christine -- Reading from outside: Acquisitional



patterns in a cross-linguistic approach / Ricca, Davide -- Index

Sommario/riassunto

This volume brings together ten contributions to the study of untutored (mainly) second but also first language acquisition. All chapters have been written from a functionalist perspective and take as the main theoretical framework a model of spontaneous second language acquisition centered on the "basic variety" as proposed by Klein and Perdue. The chapters in the volume are grouped around two research themes. The first theme concerns the acquisition of scope phenomena (negation, scope particles), the second one deals with referential movement (reference to person, time and space). Both parts provide insights in the structure of learner varieties at various stages of development, and are followed by a discussion chapter. Scope phenomena, such as negation and frequency adverbials present an important learning problem, as learners have to reconcile the logical structure of their utterances with the syntactic specifics of the language being learned. Their acquisition has been relatively neglected in studies up to date, however, and we even lack detailed knowledge about the interpretation of scope particles in the target languages. The chapters in this part of the volume set out to provide more knowledge about scope phenomena in general; more detailed descriptions of the particles in the languages under consideration; and a more general understanding of how scope is acquired. Strong findings resulting from the "ESF" project suggested universal trends in how untutored learners deal with acquisition in the very early stages (the basic variety). Chapters in this second part of the volume on referential movement look at acquisition at more advanced stages, including the production of near native speakers. Learners who progress beyond the basic variety increasingly grammaticalise their productions. This later development is supposedly more variable, as more specific aspects of the target languages are now being acquired. Chapters in this part allow to shed more light on the question regarding universal and language-specific influences on language acquisition.