Cross-Linguistic Aspects of Processability Theory (Studies in Biligualism)

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

Author(s): Manfred Pienemann
Year: 2005

Language: English
Pages: 303

Cross-Linguistic Aspects of Processability Theory......Page 2
Editorial page......Page 3
Title page......Page 4
LCC data......Page 5
Table of contents......Page 6
Abbreviations......Page 8
The focus of this book......Page 10
Acknowledgements......Page 12
1.1. The wider context......Page 16
1.2. Key psychological factors in language processing......Page 18
1.3. Incremental language generation......Page 22
1.4. A hierarchy of processing resources......Page 24
1.5. Exchange of grammatical information......Page 26
1.6. Principles of processability......Page 28
1.8. A brief sketch of LFG......Page 30
2. Second language development: ESL......Page 34
3. Second language development: German as L2......Page 44
4. Comparing L1 and L2 acquisition......Page 50
5. Developmental dynamics and generative entrenchment......Page 56
6. Variation and processing constraints......Page 61
7. Ultimate attainment and stabilisation......Page 64
Notes......Page 68
References......Page 71
1. Typological plausibility......Page 76
2. Feature unification and the case of perceptual salience......Page 80
3. Competence and performance......Page 84
4. A rough sketch of the development of PT ideas......Page 85
5. The explanatory power of PT......Page 89
References......Page 95
Processability, typological distance and L1 transfer......Page 100
1. Competing theoretical approaches to L1 transfer......Page 101
2. Processing constraints on L1 transfer......Page 106
3. Typological proximity without an advantage......Page 111
4. Typological proximity with an advantage......Page 118
5. Typological distance without a disadvantage......Page 119
6. Typological distance with an advantage......Page 122
7. Summary and conclusion......Page 124
Notes......Page 126
References......Page 127
Agreement morphology in Arabic as a second language......Page 132
1. Introduction......Page 133
2. Studies on Arabic SLA......Page 134
3. An LFG approach to agreement marking in Arabic language......Page 136
4.1. Phrasal agreement (agreement within constituent)......Page 137
4.2. Inter-Phrasal Agreement (agreement across constituents)......Page 142
4.3. The pro drop phenomenon in Arabic agreement marking......Page 146
4.4. A typological account of inter-phrasal agreement patterns......Page 148
4.5. A summary of inter-phrasal agreement structures in Arabic......Page 151
5. PT and Arabic agreement marking......Page 152
6. Predictions for Arabic SLA......Page 153
7. Empirical evidence for the PT-generated predictions......Page 154
7.1. Acquisition criteria and data analysis......Page 155
7.2. Empirical findings......Page 156
8. A processability perspective on the findings......Page 161
9. Conclusion......Page 164
Notes......Page 166
References......Page 167
1. Chinese: A brief sketch......Page 170
2.1. Aspect markers......Page 173
2.2. Classifier......Page 174
2.3. Particle de......Page 175
3. Information exchange and processing hierarchy......Page 177
4.1. Informants......Page 179
4.3. Data collection......Page 180
4.4. Data analysis and emergence criterion......Page 181
4.5. Findings......Page 182
5.1. Developmental sequence......Page 184
5.2. Instructional syllabus and language processing......Page 186
Notes......Page 190
References......Page 191
1. Introduction......Page 194
Earlier L1-L2 comparisons......Page 195
2. Research on children with SLI......Page 196
2.1. Nature or nurture?......Page 197
2.2. What is the linguistic problem?......Page 198
3. Processability Theory......Page 199
A processing perspective on L1 and L2 acquisition......Page 200
4. A processability perspective on children with SLI......Page 201
4.1. German......Page 202
4.2. Swedish......Page 204
4.3. Relation between MLU and word order......Page 207
Notes......Page 209
References......Page 210
1. Introduction......Page 214
2. The psycholinguistic focus of PT and the role of LFG......Page 218
3.1. Correspondence and linearity......Page 221
3.2. Mapping c-structure onto f-structure......Page 223
3.3. Lexical Mapping Theory......Page 227
Hierarchically ordered semantic role structures......Page 229
Lexical mapping principles from semantic roles to syntactic functions......Page 230
Well-formedness conditions on lexical forms......Page 232
3.4. Language-specificity......Page 234
3.5. Non-linearity......Page 238
3.6. The Unmarked Alignment Hypothesis......Page 240
3.7. Non-linearity and discourse functions: The TOPIC hypothesis......Page 247
3.8. Non-linearity and Lexical Mapping Theory......Page 255
4. Conclusion......Page 260
Notes......Page 261
References......Page 263
1. Introduction......Page 268
2. Brief review of the application of PT to Japanese L2......Page 270
3. Typology of Japanese and brief sketch of its grammar......Page 273
4. Hypotheses......Page 277
5.1. Research Design......Page 296
5.2. Results......Page 301
6. Discussion......Page 305
7. Conclusion......Page 307
Notes......Page 308
References......Page 309
Subject index......Page 314
The series Studies in Bilingualism......Page 319