Journal
COGNITION
Volume 74, Issue 3, Pages 209-253Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S0010-0277(99)00069-4
Keywords
language; language acquisition; cognitive development; syntax
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Many developmental psycholinguists assume that young children have adult syntactic competence, this assumption being operationalized in the use of adult-like grammars to describe young children's language. This continuity assumption has never had strong empirical support, but recently a number of new findings have emerged - both from systematic analyses of children's spontaneous speech and from controlled experiments - that contradict it directly. In general, the key finding is that most of children's early linguistic competence is item based, and therefore their language development proceeds in a piecemeal fashion with virtually no evidence of any system-wide syntactic categories, schemas, or parameters. For a variety of reasons, these findings are not easily explained in terms of the development of children's skills of linguistic performance, pragmatics, or other external factors. The framework of an alternative, usage-based theory of child language acquisition - relying explicitly on new models from Cognitive-Functional Linguistics - is presented. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
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