2013
DOI: 10.1017/s1366728913000631
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Bilingual effects: Exploring object omission in pronominal languages

Abstract: This article assesses the impact of bilingualism on the acquisition of pronominal direct objects in French and English (clitics in French and strong pronouns in English). We show that, in comparison to monolingual children, bilingual children omit more pronominal objects for a longer period in both languages. At the same time, the development in each language spoken by the bilinguals follows the developmental asymmetry found in the language of their monolingual counterparts: there are more omissions in French… Show more

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Cited by 64 publications
(70 citation statements)
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References 51 publications
(83 reference statements)
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“… 7 Pirvulescu, Pérez-Leroux, Roberge, Strik & Thomas (2014) note a very high rate of object omission by 3- to 5-year old French-English bilinguals in their elicited production study. There are a number of differences between this study and Koulidobrova’s, so the explanation for this difference awaits further research.…”
mentioning
confidence: 79%
“… 7 Pirvulescu, Pérez-Leroux, Roberge, Strik & Thomas (2014) note a very high rate of object omission by 3- to 5-year old French-English bilinguals in their elicited production study. There are a number of differences between this study and Koulidobrova’s, so the explanation for this difference awaits further research.…”
mentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Thus, the high rates of null objects in the English results and their distinct distribution compared to L1 English (e.g. from Pirvulescu et al, 2014) suggest that Ukrainian influences English in the bilingual grammar. Table 6 with the English results shows that the 4-year-olds use 30% of null objects and the 5-year-olds use 21% of null objects, which is more than 13-14% in Pirvulescu et al (2014).…”
Section: Directionality Of Influence and Previous Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…H4 -The Bilingual Effect Hypothesis (Pirvulescu et al, 2014) H1 considers extra-linguistic/social factors and predicts that there will be individual or small group differences between bilingual children, and that their use of null or overt objects will reflect patterns of the dominant language applied to the weaker language, as defined by the language exposure and patterns of use, also known as 'language input' or 'extra-linguistic factors' (see P1 in (6)). …”
Section: Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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