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Emergence of Syntax

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Title: Emergence of Syntax


1
Emergence of Syntax
2
Introduction
  • One of the most important concerns of theoretical
    linguistics today represents the study of the
    acquisition of language.
  • By studying language acquisition, we can learn
    more about the innate structures, Universal
    Grammar, which drive the process of acquisition.

3
  • Research shows
  • children and adults do not differ with respect to
    devices for acquiring language structure (the
    Continuity Approaches) or
  • Children differ in their grammar in comparison to
    adults, by building language structure (The
    Structure Building Model).

4
  • Even though children talk differently than
    adults, underlying knowledge of the language
    structure is the same.

5
Emergence of Functional Categories
  • Continuity Hypothesis (Hyams 1992)
  • Lexical elements need to be acquired
  • Grammatical principles and the Functional
    Categories are antecedently available to the
    child, containing null elements.
  • Children have full grammatical competence and the
    differences between child speech and adult speech
    should be attributed to external factors (i.e.
    developmental).

6
  • The Strong Continuity Approach - functional
    categories are available from the beginning and
    they are operative when the child starts to
    produce sentences, children are filling in the
    pre-existent categories as they mature.
  • Differences between adult speech and child speech
    are maturational.
  • This approach is also called the Maturational
    Approach (based on lexical learning as the child
    fills in the preexisting categories).

7
No Functional Categories
  • No Functional Categories The Structure
    Building Model (Radford 1990)
  • no Functional Categories available at the
    beginning
  • grammar is characterized by the absence of the
    functional categories and the child builds the
    functional categories as they acquire language.

8
Finite Vs. Non-finite
  • Parameters are set correctly very early (Wexler
    1998)
  • Children, at a very early stage, know the
    contrast between finite and non-finite verbs
  • Both finite and non-finite verbs are used, but
    finite verbs only occur in finite contexts. In
    some languages (e.g. English, Dutch, German),
    children go through an Optional Infinitive (Root
    Infinitive) stage.

9
Optional Infinitive Stage
  • Wexler (1998) - the Optional Infinitive Stage is
    caused by the so called Unique Checking
    Constraint which prevents a D-feature on DP from
    checking more than one D-feature on functional
    categories (Tense and Agreement), therefore
    forcing either TNS or AGR to be omitted.
  • The Truncation Theory (Rizzi) claims that in this
    stage, children do not recognize a Complementizer
    position in Root clauses (infinitive clauses).
  • Hoekstra and Hyams (1993) - The Optional
    Infinitive Stage results from the lack of the
    number agreement.

10
What are Root Infinitives?
  • Children produce main clauses containing an
    infinitive verb, rather than a finite verb
  • Phenomenon observed in English, Danish, Dutch,
    French, German, Russian

11
Examples
  • a. Dormir petit bébé
  • sleep-Inf little baby
  • Little baby sleep
  • b. Mary go.
  • c. Papa have it.
  • d. Dolly like ice-cream.

12
Root Infinitives
  • The Optional-Infinitive stage - stage in
    grammatical development when children use root
    infinitives and tensed verbs as grammatical, in
    alternation.

13
The Optional Infinitive Stage
  • The Optional Infinitive stage appears not only in
    English, but also in all Germanic languages, as
    well as French and other languages.
  • Children acquiring German use finite verbs in
    second position and non-finite verbs in final
    positions. This is given by the V2 process (V to
    C movement).

14
  • Wexler (1992) - null subjects are the effect of
    the Optional Infinitive stage, and there is
    evidence that children use null subjects mainly
    with non-finite verbs.
  • In the Optional Infinitive stage, Agr and/or
    Tense may be omitted. If Agreement is omitted,
    then there is no NOM case assigned, the subject
    gets the default case, which is ACC in English.
  • The lack of Tense licenses PRO, the use of the
    null subjects.

15
Pattern (Wexler)
  • a). he likes ice-cream
  • AGR, TNS
  • b). he like ice-cream
  • AGR, -TNS
  • c). him like ice-cream
  • -AGR, TNS
  • d). him likes ice-cream

16
  • Wexler (1998) proposes that the OI stage is
    caused by the so-called Unique Checking
    Constraint.
  • While raising, the subject can only check one
    D-feature from the Tense or Agreement (assuming
    that these functional projections have a
    D-feature associated with them).

17
The Truncation Theory - Rizzi
  • A child can choose to project all the way up to
    CP, or he can project just part of the way up.
  • But he cant leave anything out from the middle
    of the tree.
  • The difference between the child
  • the adult takes CP as the root node of any
    sentence, whereas the child can choose anything
    as the root node.
  • The extra constraint requiring CP to be the root
    is something that emerges maturationally some
    time before the childs third birthday.

18
Null Subject Languages
  • Children acquiring a null-subject language
    (Italian, Spanish, Catalan or Romanian) no
    Optional Infinitive stage, because they make the
    distinction between finite and non-finite verbs
    and use correct verbal forms (finite/non-finite)
    in proper environments.
  • Torrens (Spanish and Catalan) concludes that
    children do not undergo an Optional Infinitive
    stage, they distinguish between finite and
    non-finite verbs and they produce verbs in
    correct contexts.

19
Null Subject Languages
  • Italian children (Guasti 1993) - distinguish
    between finite and non-finite verbs and the
    Optional Infinitive stage is not a characteristic
    of the Italian child language.
  • Romanian children correctly place the verb forms
    in the correct distributions.

20
Null Subject Languages
  • Grinstead (2000) - Spanish and Catalan children
    - claims that children at a very early stage
    lack contrastive use of tense and number
    morphology. But this stage ends at around 110
    and that is when the recordings for the present
    research studies just started.
  • Phillips (1995) if speakers of null-subject
    languages have Root Infinitives this is happening
    before the earliest possible recording.

21
Properties of Root Infinitives
  • Do not occur in pro-drop
  • Languages
  • Occur in declarative Sentences, but not in
    wh-questions
  • Root infinitives are incompatible with auxiliaries

22
Phillips (1995)
  • Root infinitive clauses are not due to a deficit
    in syntactic or morphological knowledge.

23
  • Root infinitive clauses are fully represented
    finite clauses in which merger of the verb with
    inflection has been delayed

24
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25
  • Phillips (1995) root infinitives depend on the
    interaction of the detailed knowledge children
    have of their target language at a very early age
    with one specific performance factor the task of
    accessing morphological knowledge.
  • The morphological simplifications not a
    reflection of the childs knowledge of syntax

26
  • The root infinitive stage lasts for different
    lengths of time in different children, and
    individual children use root infinitives with
    widely differing frequencies
  • Frequency of root infinitive use drops off
    gradually over time.

27
Root Infinitives in German and Dutch
28
English
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