How do children acquire a Creole as their first language? This relatively underexplored question is the starting point for this first book of its kind; it also asks how first language acquisition of a Creole differs from that of a non-Creole language. Dany Adone reveals that in the absence of a conventional language model, Creole children acquire language and go beyond the input they receive. This study discusses the role of input, a hotly debated issue in the field of first language acquisition, and provides support for the nativist approach in the debate between nativism and input-based models. The Acquisition of Creole Languages will be essential reading for those in the fields of first language acquisition and Creole studies. Adone takes an interdisciplinary approach, using insights from non-verbal language acquisition, which makes this of great interest to those in the field of sign linguistics.
Author(s): Dany Adone
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2012
Language: English
Pages: 244
Cover
Summary
Title page
Contents
Figures
Tables
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
1 Creole languages
2 Issues in first language acquisition
3 Complex Creole syntax
4 Child Creole data
5 Pronouns and reflexives
6 Double-object constructions
7 Passive constructions
8 Serial verb constructions
9 Acquisition without a conventional language model
Appendix A: Experimental materials on constructions with pronouns and reflexives
Appendix B: Experimental materials on double-object constructions
Appendix C: Experimental materials on passive constructions
Appendix D: Experimental materials on serial verb constructions
References
Index