Danish Vestigial Case and the Acquisition of Vocabulary in Distributed Morphology

As Halle & Marantz (2008: 71) acknowledge, “we have no real idea about how a child assigns features to Vocabulary Items” in Distributed Morphology (DM). Stated generally, how do children acquire language-specific (sometimes variable) mappings between morpho-syntactic features and their morpho-ph...

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Main Author: Jeffrey K. Parrott
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Biolinguistics 2009-09-01
Series:Biolinguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://biolinguistics.eu/index.php/biolinguistics/article/view/79
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spelling doaj-c125b6fa2a9f46c9b5b100b3d5ea5adf2020-11-24T22:11:51ZengBiolinguisticsBiolinguistics1450-34172009-09-0132-327030467Danish Vestigial Case and the Acquisition of Vocabulary in Distributed MorphologyJeffrey K. Parrott0LANCHART Center, University of CopenhagenAs Halle & Marantz (2008: 71) acknowledge, “we have no real idea about how a child assigns features to Vocabulary Items” in Distributed Morphology (DM). Stated generally, how do children acquire language-specific (sometimes variable) mappings between morpho-syntactic features and their morpho-phonological exponents? Following Emonds (1986) in a DM framework, this article advances a testable ‘morphological transparency’ constraint on the acquisition of Vocabulary, and presents supporting results from a pilot observational child-language study in Danish. This constraint explains a significant difference in the mechanisms of Germanic case morphology. By hypothesis, ‘vestigial’ case forms of English and Danish pronouns are contextual allomorphs, with Vocabulary that do not contain any morpho-syntactic case features. Vestigial-case mechanisms constitute a comprehensive analysis of intra-individually variable case-form mismatches in coordinate Determiner Phrases, predicate nominals, and other syntactic structures. Thus, a principle of language acquisition ultimately explains the distribution of case forms both within and across language varieties.http://biolinguistics.eu/index.php/biolinguistics/article/view/79acquisitioncaseDanishDistributed MorphologyGermanic
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeffrey K. Parrott
spellingShingle Jeffrey K. Parrott
Danish Vestigial Case and the Acquisition of Vocabulary in Distributed Morphology
Biolinguistics
acquisition
case
Danish
Distributed Morphology
Germanic
author_facet Jeffrey K. Parrott
author_sort Jeffrey K. Parrott
title Danish Vestigial Case and the Acquisition of Vocabulary in Distributed Morphology
title_short Danish Vestigial Case and the Acquisition of Vocabulary in Distributed Morphology
title_full Danish Vestigial Case and the Acquisition of Vocabulary in Distributed Morphology
title_fullStr Danish Vestigial Case and the Acquisition of Vocabulary in Distributed Morphology
title_full_unstemmed Danish Vestigial Case and the Acquisition of Vocabulary in Distributed Morphology
title_sort danish vestigial case and the acquisition of vocabulary in distributed morphology
publisher Biolinguistics
series Biolinguistics
issn 1450-3417
publishDate 2009-09-01
description As Halle & Marantz (2008: 71) acknowledge, “we have no real idea about how a child assigns features to Vocabulary Items” in Distributed Morphology (DM). Stated generally, how do children acquire language-specific (sometimes variable) mappings between morpho-syntactic features and their morpho-phonological exponents? Following Emonds (1986) in a DM framework, this article advances a testable ‘morphological transparency’ constraint on the acquisition of Vocabulary, and presents supporting results from a pilot observational child-language study in Danish. This constraint explains a significant difference in the mechanisms of Germanic case morphology. By hypothesis, ‘vestigial’ case forms of English and Danish pronouns are contextual allomorphs, with Vocabulary that do not contain any morpho-syntactic case features. Vestigial-case mechanisms constitute a comprehensive analysis of intra-individually variable case-form mismatches in coordinate Determiner Phrases, predicate nominals, and other syntactic structures. Thus, a principle of language acquisition ultimately explains the distribution of case forms both within and across language varieties.
topic acquisition
case
Danish
Distributed Morphology
Germanic
url http://biolinguistics.eu/index.php/biolinguistics/article/view/79
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