TY - JOUR
T1 - From Pre-Grammaticality to Proficiency in L1
T2 - Acquiring and Developing Infinitival Usage in Hebrew
AU - Berman, Ruth A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Ruth A. Berman, published by Sciendo 2018.
PY - 2018/1/1
Y1 - 2018/1/1
N2 - The study traces the developmental route in acquisition and use of infinitives (e.g., lišon 'to sleep', le-exol 'to-eat', la-asot 'to-do') in Hebrew as a first language, proceeding from the initial, "pre-grammatical" emergence of linguistic forms among toddlers to structure-based knowledge and proficient use of the same devices in adolescence. Analysis involves a varied data-base of L1 oral Hebrew usage in: parent-child interactions of children aged 1;6 to 3;0 years; elicited storybook-based narratives of preschoolers; and personal-experience narratives and expository talks of schoolchildren, adolescents, and adults. Findings show that infinitives constitute an interesting test-case for examining the route from initial emergence via acquisition to maturely proficient command of a given subsystem in L1. Infinitival structures in Modern Hebrew, a language with an impoverished system of nonfinite verbs and lacking in auxiliaries of the kind common in Standard Average European, reveal a long developmental path, showing increasing complexity at all levels of language use: morphological form, types of syntactic constructions, semantic content, and discursive function, the latter primarily for the purpose of achieving textual connectivity.
AB - The study traces the developmental route in acquisition and use of infinitives (e.g., lišon 'to sleep', le-exol 'to-eat', la-asot 'to-do') in Hebrew as a first language, proceeding from the initial, "pre-grammatical" emergence of linguistic forms among toddlers to structure-based knowledge and proficient use of the same devices in adolescence. Analysis involves a varied data-base of L1 oral Hebrew usage in: parent-child interactions of children aged 1;6 to 3;0 years; elicited storybook-based narratives of preschoolers; and personal-experience narratives and expository talks of schoolchildren, adolescents, and adults. Findings show that infinitives constitute an interesting test-case for examining the route from initial emergence via acquisition to maturely proficient command of a given subsystem in L1. Infinitival structures in Modern Hebrew, a language with an impoverished system of nonfinite verbs and lacking in auxiliaries of the kind common in Standard Average European, reveal a long developmental path, showing increasing complexity at all levels of language use: morphological form, types of syntactic constructions, semantic content, and discursive function, the latter primarily for the purpose of achieving textual connectivity.
KW - Hebrew
KW - L1 aquisition
KW - infinitives
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85065255286&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2478/plc-2018-0025
DO - 10.2478/plc-2018-0025
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AN - SCOPUS:85065255286
VL - 22
SP - 557
EP - 580
JO - Psychology of Language and Communication
JF - Psychology of Language and Communication
SN - 1234-2238
IS - 1
ER -