Article use in L2 English by L1 Russian and L1 German speakers

Article misuse and omission are common errors in article use in L2 English. A particularly influential theory concerned with article misuse is that of Ionin (2003a, 2003b), whose basic assumption is that, in L2 acquisition, adult learners still have access to Universal Grammar. Central to her th...

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Main Author: Schönenberger Manuela
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: De Gruyter 2014-06-01
Series:Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/zfs-2014-0003
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spelling doaj-24d030f582ee474e8a33d80ff90978dd2021-09-05T20:51:39ZdeuDe GruyterZeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft0721-90671613-37062014-06-013317710510.1515/zfs-2014-0003Article use in L2 English by L1 Russian and L1 German speakersSchönenberger Manuela0Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg, Seminar für Anglistik/AmerikanistikArticle misuse and omission are common errors in article use in L2 English. A particularly influential theory concerned with article misuse is that of Ionin (2003a, 2003b), whose basic assumption is that, in L2 acquisition, adult learners still have access to Universal Grammar. Central to her theory is the concept of the Article-Choice Parameter, which is set to either definiteness or specificity in article-based languages. According to Ionin’s Fluctuation Hypothesis, speakers of a language without articles fluctuate between the two settings of this parameter and produce systematic errors in article choice. Speakers of an L1 with articles have been shown to transfer the parameter value from their L1 to L2 English. This paper tests the predictions made by Ionin’s account, based on data from an empirical study with a group of German speakers and two groups of Russian speakers. One of the Russian groups had studied English for a longer period of time, and at university level, and also had knowledge of another L2 with articles besides English. The results from this study do not provide clear support for Ionin’s account. The German group rarely misused articles, as predicted, but only one of the Russian groups showed fluctuation. The Russian group with fewer years of English study and generally no knowledge of another L2 with articles showed variable patterns of article misuse and also often omitted articles. An explanation of why the two Russian groups differed is proposed.https://doi.org/10.1515/zfs-2014-0003adult l2 englisharticle-choice parameterarticle misusearticle omissionfluctuationtransfer
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Schönenberger Manuela
spellingShingle Schönenberger Manuela
Article use in L2 English by L1 Russian and L1 German speakers
Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft
adult l2 english
article-choice parameter
article misuse
article omission
fluctuation
transfer
author_facet Schönenberger Manuela
author_sort Schönenberger Manuela
title Article use in L2 English by L1 Russian and L1 German speakers
title_short Article use in L2 English by L1 Russian and L1 German speakers
title_full Article use in L2 English by L1 Russian and L1 German speakers
title_fullStr Article use in L2 English by L1 Russian and L1 German speakers
title_full_unstemmed Article use in L2 English by L1 Russian and L1 German speakers
title_sort article use in l2 english by l1 russian and l1 german speakers
publisher De Gruyter
series Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft
issn 0721-9067
1613-3706
publishDate 2014-06-01
description Article misuse and omission are common errors in article use in L2 English. A particularly influential theory concerned with article misuse is that of Ionin (2003a, 2003b), whose basic assumption is that, in L2 acquisition, adult learners still have access to Universal Grammar. Central to her theory is the concept of the Article-Choice Parameter, which is set to either definiteness or specificity in article-based languages. According to Ionin’s Fluctuation Hypothesis, speakers of a language without articles fluctuate between the two settings of this parameter and produce systematic errors in article choice. Speakers of an L1 with articles have been shown to transfer the parameter value from their L1 to L2 English. This paper tests the predictions made by Ionin’s account, based on data from an empirical study with a group of German speakers and two groups of Russian speakers. One of the Russian groups had studied English for a longer period of time, and at university level, and also had knowledge of another L2 with articles besides English. The results from this study do not provide clear support for Ionin’s account. The German group rarely misused articles, as predicted, but only one of the Russian groups showed fluctuation. The Russian group with fewer years of English study and generally no knowledge of another L2 with articles showed variable patterns of article misuse and also often omitted articles. An explanation of why the two Russian groups differed is proposed.
topic adult l2 english
article-choice parameter
article misuse
article omission
fluctuation
transfer
url https://doi.org/10.1515/zfs-2014-0003
work_keys_str_mv AT schonenbergermanuela articleuseinl2englishbyl1russianandl1germanspeakers
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