2001
DOI: 10.1075/tilar.1.09qua
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Managing linguistic boundaries in early trilingual development

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Cited by 43 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…Reporting the main findings of Montanari (2009a), this section focuses on Kathryn's ability to modify her patterns of language use following the language of her interlocutors. Recall that this was the topic of Quay's (2001;2008) and Chevalier's (2011) studies, which revealed that trilingual-to-be children differ in the extent to which they can make active use of the minority languages when interacting with speakers of those languages. This section specifically examines Kathryn's patterns of language choice with Tagalog, Spanish, and English speakers at age 1;10 to assess: (1) whether evidence for pragmatic differentiation could be found even before age two and within a mixed language context, where the child was being simultaneously confronted by distinct language users; (2) whether lack of proficiency was responsible for her choice of one language over another; (3) whether the child's language choice was affected by the interlocutors' language preferences and their responses to language mixing.…”
Section: Language Choice With Different Language Usersmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Reporting the main findings of Montanari (2009a), this section focuses on Kathryn's ability to modify her patterns of language use following the language of her interlocutors. Recall that this was the topic of Quay's (2001;2008) and Chevalier's (2011) studies, which revealed that trilingual-to-be children differ in the extent to which they can make active use of the minority languages when interacting with speakers of those languages. This section specifically examines Kathryn's patterns of language choice with Tagalog, Spanish, and English speakers at age 1;10 to assess: (1) whether evidence for pragmatic differentiation could be found even before age two and within a mixed language context, where the child was being simultaneously confronted by distinct language users; (2) whether lack of proficiency was responsible for her choice of one language over another; (3) whether the child's language choice was affected by the interlocutors' language preferences and their responses to language mixing.…”
Section: Language Choice With Different Language Usersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Quay (2001Quay ( , 2008, for example, who investigated two developing trilingual children's ability to modify their language use following the language preferences of the interlocutors -and hence speak three languages, found strikingly different results for the two children. In particular, in her first investigation (Quay, 2001), a developing Japanese-English-German trilingual boy growing up in Japan failed to show much use of the two minority languages while addressing his parents between 1;1 and 1;10, limiting himself to the use of Japanese.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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