2005
DOI: 10.1080/14790710508668380
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Who Transfers More … and What? Crosslinguistic Influence in Relation to School Grade and Language Dominance in EFL

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Cited by 59 publications
(43 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
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“…In this sense, research shows that the performance of beginner learners showed more instances of negative transfer than that of more advanced learners (Herwig, 2001;LoCoco, 1975;Naves et al, 2005;Olsen, 1999;Ringbom, 1987;Williams & Hammarberg, 1998). These results confirm the idea that transfer is used as a strategy to fill lexical gaps when learners lack L2 knowledge (Murphy, 2003).…”
Section: Lexical Transfer and L2 Proficiencysupporting
confidence: 75%
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“…In this sense, research shows that the performance of beginner learners showed more instances of negative transfer than that of more advanced learners (Herwig, 2001;LoCoco, 1975;Naves et al, 2005;Olsen, 1999;Ringbom, 1987;Williams & Hammarberg, 1998). These results confirm the idea that transfer is used as a strategy to fill lexical gaps when learners lack L2 knowledge (Murphy, 2003).…”
Section: Lexical Transfer and L2 Proficiencysupporting
confidence: 75%
“…Borrowings have been found to decrease considerably with proficiency. Naves et al (2005) report that as learners progress in school grade their use of borrowings and lexical inventions decreases, nevertheless, the difference is significant only for borrowings. Celaya (2007) observed that borrowings decreased from 5 th to 7 th grade, whereas lexical inventions (coinages and calques) increased slightly with grade (also Celaya & Torras, 2001;Gabryś-Barker, 2006, Gost & Celaya, 2005…”
Section: Lexical Transfer and L2 Proficiencymentioning
confidence: 99%
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