Ku Waru Clause Chaining and the Acquisition of Complex Syntax
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Rumsey, Alan
Reed, Lauren
Merlan, Francesca
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Frontiers Media
Abstract
How do children learn to understand and use complex syntactic constructions? In
English, Diessel (2004) shows that they do so in two different ways. Complex sentences
with dependent clauses (e.g., “Peter promised that he would come”) develop out
of simple sentences that are gradually expanded into multi-clause ones. Complex
sentences with coordinate clauses (e.g., “He tried hard, but he failed”) develop by
integrating two independent sentences into a single two-clause unit. Here we expand
on that research by focusing on the acquisition of a kind of complex syntactic structure
which involves both dependency and coordination—the clause chain—in Ku Waru, a
Papuan language spoken in the Western Highlands of Papua New Guinea. Clause chains
are constructions coordinating multiple clauses in sequence, where the non-final or
“medial” clauses are in a dependent relationship with the final clause. One function of
clause chains, which is often taken to be the prototypical one, is to refer to a series of
events in sequence. Some Ku Waru clause chains do refer to sequential events. Other Ku
Waru clause chains containing particular verbs refer to single events, sometimes with the
particular verb providing aspectual or adverbial qualification (“keep doing,” “do quickly,”
etc.). In this article, we track the acquisition of several different kinds of clause chains
based on longitudinal recordings of four children acquiring Ku Waru as their first language
between the ages of 1½ and 5. We show that, although there are differences among the
children in the ages at which they acquire the various kinds of clause chain, all four of
them follow the same series of steps in doing so. In conclusion, we compare our findings
to Diessel’s for English. We find that they are similar in some ways and different in others,
which may be related to the differences between subordinate constructions, coordinate
non-dependent constructions and coordinate-dependent constructions.
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Frontiers in Communication
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