The Non-Biological Evolution of Grammar: Wh-Question Formation in Germanic

The wh-marking of questions in child English is as early as the appearance of the wh-questions themselves. The wh-marking of questions in child Dutch (and the other Germanic languages) is delayed until the acquisition of articles and free anaphoric pronouns. An acquisition procedure is proposed that...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jacqueline van Kampen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Biolinguistics 2009-06-01
Series:Biolinguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://biolinguistics.eu/index.php/biolinguistics/article/view/83
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spelling doaj-23e6bdb5d2ae4b378a03208eadf4262a2020-11-24T23:37:55ZengBiolinguisticsBiolinguistics1450-34172009-06-0132-315418564The Non-Biological Evolution of Grammar: Wh-Question Formation in GermanicJacqueline van Kampen0UiL OTS, Utrecht UniversityThe wh-marking of questions in child English is as early as the appearance of the wh-questions themselves. The wh-marking of questions in child Dutch (and the other Germanic languages) is delayed until the acquisition of articles and free anaphoric pronouns. An acquisition procedure is proposed that succeeds to set first a typological difference, V2 for Dutch and SVfinO for English. The different setting of the typological parameters determines the wh-development in subsequent acquisition steps. The learnability approach relativizes Chomsky’s poverty of the stimulus, but affirms his position that language is ‘perfect’ in the sense of being learnable as a cultural construct without the assumption of innate grammar-specific a prioris.http://biolinguistics.eu/index.php/biolinguistics/article/view/83acquisition of wh-questionschild Dutch/Englishcultural evolutionlearnabilitylexicalism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jacqueline van Kampen
spellingShingle Jacqueline van Kampen
The Non-Biological Evolution of Grammar: Wh-Question Formation in Germanic
Biolinguistics
acquisition of wh-questions
child Dutch/English
cultural evolution
learnability
lexicalism
author_facet Jacqueline van Kampen
author_sort Jacqueline van Kampen
title The Non-Biological Evolution of Grammar: Wh-Question Formation in Germanic
title_short The Non-Biological Evolution of Grammar: Wh-Question Formation in Germanic
title_full The Non-Biological Evolution of Grammar: Wh-Question Formation in Germanic
title_fullStr The Non-Biological Evolution of Grammar: Wh-Question Formation in Germanic
title_full_unstemmed The Non-Biological Evolution of Grammar: Wh-Question Formation in Germanic
title_sort non-biological evolution of grammar: wh-question formation in germanic
publisher Biolinguistics
series Biolinguistics
issn 1450-3417
publishDate 2009-06-01
description The wh-marking of questions in child English is as early as the appearance of the wh-questions themselves. The wh-marking of questions in child Dutch (and the other Germanic languages) is delayed until the acquisition of articles and free anaphoric pronouns. An acquisition procedure is proposed that succeeds to set first a typological difference, V2 for Dutch and SVfinO for English. The different setting of the typological parameters determines the wh-development in subsequent acquisition steps. The learnability approach relativizes Chomsky’s poverty of the stimulus, but affirms his position that language is ‘perfect’ in the sense of being learnable as a cultural construct without the assumption of innate grammar-specific a prioris.
topic acquisition of wh-questions
child Dutch/English
cultural evolution
learnability
lexicalism
url http://biolinguistics.eu/index.php/biolinguistics/article/view/83
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