Think of a number: learning to make nouns plural in second language acquisition

Date

2012

Authors

Charters, Helen
Jansen, Louise
Dao, Loan

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Association Francaise de Linguistique Cognitive

Abstract

Dao (2007) found that Vietnamese speaking learners of English, produced plural-marking in numeric expressions before producing plural nouns alone. This runs counter to the predictions of Processability Theory (PT) (Pienemann, 1998, 2005, 2007; Pienemann et al., 2005). We use Levelt’s (1989) Theory of Speaking as modelled in Weaver++ (Levelt, Roelofs & Meyer, 1999) to argue that an agreeing combination of a numeral and noun can be produced without feature unification, and thus is no more cognitively demanding than inflection of a single noun, and that the cognitive framework of Vietnamese, a classifier language, facilitates production of the plural suffix in a numeric context, but not on a noun used alone. In other words, early production of plural agreement is facilitated by a form of conceptual transfer (Jarvis, 2011).

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

CogniTextes

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Restricted until