Age and input in the acquisition of grammatical gender in Dutch

International audience ; This article investigates the effect of age of first exposure and the quantity and quality of input to which non-native acquirers (L2ers) are exposed in their acquisition of grammatical gender in Dutch. Data from 103 English-speaking children, preteens and adults were analysed for gender agreement on definite determiners. It was observed that although most learners regularly overgeneralized the common gender definite determiner to neuter nouns, there also existed child and adult L2ers who consistently produced the target neuter determiner with these nouns ( Carroll, 19... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Unsworth, Sharon
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2008
Verlag/Hrsg.: HAL CCSD
Schlagwörter: grammatical gender / Dutch / age effects in L2 / input in L2 / child L2 acquisition
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-28977406
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://hal.science/hal-00570748

International audience ; This article investigates the effect of age of first exposure and the quantity and quality of input to which non-native acquirers (L2ers) are exposed in their acquisition of grammatical gender in Dutch. Data from 103 English-speaking children, preteens and adults were analysed for gender agreement on definite determiners. It was observed that although most learners regularly overgeneralized the common gender definite determiner to neuter nouns, there also existed child and adult L2ers who consistently produced the target neuter determiner with these nouns ( Carroll, 1989; Hawkins and Franceschina, 2004; Franceschina, 2005). Participants in all three groups produced equally frequently with non-derived nouns as with diminutives, one of the few reliable morphophonological cues for neuter gender (compare Carroll, 1999). The present findings are evaluated in light of previous research (Hulk and Cornips, 2006a) suggesting that the quality of input to which L2ers are exposed may significantly affect their ability to proceed beyond the aforementioned stage of overgeneralization. Evidence for frequency effects and the observation that targetlike performance correlated with length of exposure suggests that quantity of input is a significant factor in the acquisition of Dutch gender. This is to be expected if the acquisition of gender is for a large part word-learning (Carroll, 1989; Montrul and Potowski, 2007)