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The Acquisition of Lexical Categories

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Title: The Acquisition of Lexical Categories


1
The Acquisition of Lexical Categories
Marian Erkelens
2
Bootstrap of this project
  • Acquisition of word meaning
  • Relation between semantics and syntax what
    serves as a bootstrap to what (Pinker, 1984
    Gleitman, 1990)?

3
General Issues
  • The nature of lexical categories.
  • The typology of lexical categories in combination
    with the acquisition of lexical categories

4
Research questions (Issue I)
  • What is the nature of categorial information of
    content words?
  • How do children acquire the categories of content
    words?

5
Research questions (Issue II)
  • 3. How do languages typologically differ in the
    organization of lexical categories?
  • 4. Do children learning typologically different
    languages follow different acquisitional
    patterns?

6
Outline
  • Results in answer to the questions concerning the
    first issue
  • What is the nature of categorial information of
    content words?
  • How do children acquire the categories of content
    words?
  • Short introduction to future research concerning
    the second issue the typology and the
    acquisition of lexical categories.

7
What is the nature of categorial information of
content words?
  • Generative approaches
  • Traditionally
  • categorial information is stored in the lexicon
    (Lieber, 1981)
  • Distributed Morphology
  • categorial information is attached to a word by
    the syntax (Marantz, 1997)

8
What is the nature of categorial information of
content words?
  • Functional approach (Hengeveld et al, f.c.)

Hierarchy of syntactic functions Head lt Head
lt Modifier lt Modifier PredPhr RefPhr RefPhr PredPh
r
Hierarchy of related parts-of-speech
V lt N lt A lt MAdv
9
How do children acquire the categories of content
words?
  • Expectations from theory
  • Children learn words including their category.
    Category acquisition is part of lexical
    development (Lieber).
  • Children learn words independent of their
    category. Category acquisition is part of
    syntactic or language-specific development
  • (Marantz / Hengeveld).

10
How do children acquire the categories of content
words?
  • Empirical data first words
  • First words are predominantly nouns (Gentner,
    1982), although debated (Choi Gopnik, 1995
    Tardif, 1996)
  • But do these words have a category at all? Or
    does category come in with syntactic I- and
    D-marking (Van Kampen, f.c.)?

11
How do children acquire the categories of content
words?
  • Empirical data later stages English
  • I sharped them A V
  • Im sanding N V
  • Are they silling? A V

12
How do children acquire the categories of content
words?
  • Empirical data later stages Dutch
  • Jij wil altijd luiwen
  • you want always lazy-INF
  • You always want to lazy A V
  • Het zandt hier
  • it sand-3SG here
  • It sands here N V

13
How do children acquire the categories of content
words?
  • Empirical data later stages Mandarin
  • Na shi wo de qi chuang
  • this be my POS rise bed
  • This is my getting-up from bed V N
  • Mei you hong ta de jiao
  • not have red her POS feet
  • (we) havent reddened her feet A V

14
How do children acquire the categories of content
words?
  • Implications
  • Recent literature (Marantz, 1997 Van Kampen,
    f.c.) suggests children might start with
    category-less words.
  • Initial data from Dutch and Mandarin children of
    errors in categorization support these ideas.

15
How do children acquire the categories of content
words?
  • Next step
  • Assuming that children start with an initial,
    category-less or uni-categorial stage in lexical
    acquisition
  • How then, do they acquire in later stages the
    categorial system of their mother tongue?

16
Typological differences (II) 1
17
Do children learning typologically different
languages follow different acquisitional
patterns?
  • Future research...

18
References
  • Choi, S., Gopnik, A. (1995). Early Acquisition
    of Verbs in Korean A Cross-Linguistic Study.
    Journal of Child Language, 22(3), 497-529.
  • Gentner, D. (1982). Why nouns are learned before
    verbs linguistic relativity versus natural
    partitioning. In S. A. Kuczaj (Ed.), Language
    development (pp. 301-334). Hillsdale, N.J.
    Lawrence Erlbaum.
  • Gleitman, L. (1990). The Structural Sources of
    Verb Meanings. Language Acquisition, 1(1), 3-55.
  • Hengeveld, K., Rijkhoff, J., Siewierska, A.
    (f.c.). Parts-of-speech systems and word order.
    To appear in Journal of Linguistics, 41(1).
  • Kampen, J. v. (1997). First Steps in Wh-movement.
    Delft EburonPL.
  • Kampen, J. v. (f.c.). Language specific
    bootstraps for UG categories.
  • Lieber, R. (1981). On the organization of the
    lexicon. Bloomington (Ind.) Indiana University
    Linguistics Club.
  • Marantz, A. (1997). No Escape from Syntax Don't
    Try Morphological Analysis in the Privacy of Your
    Own Lexicon. University of Pennsylvania Working
    Papers in Linguistics (UPWPL), 4(2), 201-225.
  • Pinker, S. (1984). Language learnability and
    language development. Cambridge, Mass. Harvard
    University Press.
  • Tardif, T. (1996). Nouns are not always learned
    before verbs evidence from Mandarin speakers'
    early vocabularies. Developmental Psychology,
    32(3), 492-504.
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