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  1. Language Programs, the International University of Japan

THE ACQUISITION OF ENGLISH BY A JAPANESE-SPEAKING CHILD: WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON THE ACQUISITION OF THE VA SEQUENCE AND THE PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE

https://iuj.repo.nii.ac.jp/records/836
https://iuj.repo.nii.ac.jp/records/836
97ba8b9b-ec02-48ec-ad5b-1ed2141abd88
名前 / ファイル ライセンス アクション
2011_3_iuj2_36.pdf 2011_3_iuj2_36 (1.1 MB)
Item type 会議発表論文 / Conference Paper(1)
公開日 2017-12-18
タイトル
タイトル THE ACQUISITION OF ENGLISH BY A JAPANESE-SPEAKING CHILD: WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON THE ACQUISITION OF THE VA SEQUENCE AND THE PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE
タイトル
タイトル THE ACQUISITION OF ENGLISH BY A JAPANESE-SPEAKING CHILD: WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON THE ACQUISITION OF THE VA SEQUENCE AND THE PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE
言語 en
言語
言語 eng
資源タイプ
資源タイプ識別子 http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794
資源タイプ conference paper
著者 山本, 麻子

× 山本, 麻子

山本, 麻子

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Yamada-Yamamoto, Asako

× Yamada-Yamamoto, Asako

en Yamada-Yamamoto, Asako

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内容記述タイプ Abstract
内容記述 A longitudinal case study was conducted in Britain on early English syntactic development of a young Japanese-speaking chilld. It was revealed that his English acquisition was markedly different from English-speaking children. The comparison of utterance types revealed that his VO and VA-type utterances were infrequent and restricted. The emergence order of his utterance types was noticeably different. Although the instances ware few, he produced utterances with word-order reversal (i.e. OV and AV sequences), with the sibilant sound attached to Object and Adverbial (Yamada-Yamamoto 1993 and 1994). His preposition + NP combinations also lacked productivity. In addition, he sometimes produced instances with word-order reversal (e.g. you for big (= "A big one for you")). Further, unlike English-speaking children, he did not produce utterances with prepositions being omitted. The lack of productivity, together with word-order reversal, for both VA and Preposition + NP sequences, suggested that this child initially lacked grammaticcal control over VA and/or Prep + NP word orders in English. This suggestions was verified by the experiment based on the Derbyshire Language Scheme (Knowles % Masidlover 1982). The above-mentioned unusual aspect of this child's early English speech was explained from the typological differences between English and Japanese: Japanese is a typical head-final language; English, on the other hand, is a good example of a head-initial language (e.g.Comrie 1981). The scarcity in the production of both VA and AV sequences, as well as both Prep + NP sequences, suggests that this child initially avoided word combinations involving 'V' and 'A' and 'Prep' and 'NP'. The Japanese language influenced, therefore, only as a default, and it worked as a basic principle for him, unless he overruled it by the English principle, such as VA and Prep + NP, which he fradually acquired in due course.
書誌情報 en : Proceedings of the conference on second language research in Japan

発行日 1995-03-01
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