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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Biolinguistics
2009-09-01
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Online Access: | http://biolinguistics.eu/index.php/biolinguistics/article/view/79 |
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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 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT jeffreykparrott danishvestigialcaseandtheacquisitionofvocabularyindistributedmorphology |
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