2003
DOI: 10.1191/0267658303sr224oa
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Lexical and discourse factors in the second language acquisition of Spanish word order

Abstract: This study investigates the acquisition of Spanish word order by native speakers of English. Specifically, it considers the development of sensitivity to the distinct interpretations of subject-verb (SV) vs. verb-subject (VS) order, as determined by lexical verb class (unaccusative and unergative verbs) and discourse structure. Participants included a native speaker control group and learners at four proficiency levels. Results from a contextualized production task indicate that beginning learners transferred … Show more

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Cited by 99 publications
(120 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
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“…It has been argued recently that information structure notions, such as topic and focus, appear to play a crucial role in the position of S in free-order languages, with preverbal Ss usually analysed as topics or given information, and postverbal Ss as (presentational/informational) focus or new information (see, among others, Vallduví 1990, Fernández-Soriano 1993, Liceras et al 1994, Picallo 1998, Zubizarreta 1998, Belletti 2001, 2004b, Domínguez 2004, Lozano 2006 Empirical studies on Spanish native speakers' acceptability preferences show, however, that verb choice may determine whether the answer to questions like (19) may contain either a preverbal or a postverbal S. In particular, preverbal Ss are favoured for unergative Vs and postverbal Ss in unaccusative contexts (Hertel 2003, Lozano 2003, 2006) (see also Pinto 1997 for similar observations for Italian), as in (20). (20) a. i. Juan ha hablado.…”
Section: Inversion As Focalisationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been argued recently that information structure notions, such as topic and focus, appear to play a crucial role in the position of S in free-order languages, with preverbal Ss usually analysed as topics or given information, and postverbal Ss as (presentational/informational) focus or new information (see, among others, Vallduví 1990, Fernández-Soriano 1993, Liceras et al 1994, Picallo 1998, Zubizarreta 1998, Belletti 2001, 2004b, Domínguez 2004, Lozano 2006 Empirical studies on Spanish native speakers' acceptability preferences show, however, that verb choice may determine whether the answer to questions like (19) may contain either a preverbal or a postverbal S. In particular, preverbal Ss are favoured for unergative Vs and postverbal Ss in unaccusative contexts (Hertel 2003, Lozano 2003, 2006) (see also Pinto 1997 for similar observations for Italian), as in (20). (20) a. i. Juan ha hablado.…”
Section: Inversion As Focalisationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Much previous research on second language (L2) acquisition has focused on the influence of the L1 on the L2 (Argyri & Sorace 2007;Belletti et al 2007;Hertel 2003;Hopp 2009;Lozano 2006Lozano , 2009Montrul 2004a;Paradis & Navarro 2003;Rothman 2009;Serratrice et al 2011;Serratrice et al 2004;), but to a much lesser extent on the influence that the L2 might have in the native language (L1) of nonnative speakers. This phenomenon is known as 'L1 attrition', and it refers to the changes in a speaker's L1 as the result of the acquisition of an L2.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…bilingual children, near-native speakers and L1 attriters). Previous research addressed aspects such as the effects of The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10936-015-9372-4 4 semantic or discourse factors in the acquisition of word order (Belletti et al 2007;Hertel 2003;Hopp 2009;Lozano 2006;Montrul 2004a;Wilson 2009), or the influence of pragmatics in the acquisition of null versus overt pronominal subjects and objects (Argyri and Sorace 2007;Belletti et al 2007;Lozano 2009;Montrul 2004b;Paradis and Navarro 2003;Rothman 2009;Serratrice et al 2011;Serratrice et al 2004;Tsimpli et al 2004). Structures that are sensitive to pragmatic or contextual conditions have been an especially privileged ground for research.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hertel 2003;Lozano 2006;Tsimpli & Sorace 2006;Belletti et al 2007;Rothman 2009). In the past, generative linguists have often relegated these problems to domains outside the grammar proper, e.g.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Common to them all is that learners at high proficiency levels continue to grapple with the pragmatically appropriate distributional pattern (e.g. Carroll & Lambert 2003;Carroll & von Stutterheim 2003;Hertel 2003;Lozano 2006;Sorace & Filiaci 2006;Belletti et al 2007;Rothman 2009). Since in many of these studies the highest-proficiency group diverges from the native controls, some researchers have drawn the conclusion that information structuring in L2 acquisition never becomes fully native-like (e.g.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%