“…For example, a case study conducted by Dastgahian and Rostami (2013) showed that early bilingualism did not cause any delay in language acquisition process. Although it is accepted that L1 knowledge is usually stronger than L2 among preschoolers (Sevinc & Onkol, 2009;Unsworth, 2013), especially in vocabulary (Klassert, Gagarina, & Kauschke, 2014) since, for example, some image representations are more strongly connected to L1 than L2 (Jared, Poh, & Paivio, 2013), similarity has been found in rates and types of language processes such as phonology (Lin & Johnson, 2010) and ability to repair conversational breakdowns (Comeau, Genesee, & Mendelson, 2010). It also has been shown that bilingual children have the opportunity to assimilate new L2 sounds by matching them with familiar sounds in their L1, supporting the propositions of the Perceptual Assimilation Model (Ho, 2009).…”