Researchers have long been puzzled by children’s variable omission of grammatical morphemes, often attributing this to a lack of semantic or syntactic competence. Recent studies suggest that some of this variability may be due to phonological constraints. This paper explored this issue further by conducting a longitudinal study of five English-speaking one- to two-year-olds ’ acquisition of articles. It found that most children were more likely to produce articles when these could be produced as part of a disyllabic foot. However, acoustic analysis revealed that one child initially produced all articles as independent prosodic words. These findings confirm that some of the variable production of articles is conditioned by constraints on chi...
Purpose: Children variably produce grammatical morphemes at early stages of development, often omitt...
In language acquisition, children use prosody in their comprehension and production of utterances. I...
It is well known that children’s production of grammatical morphemes is variable. This variability h...
Studies of English and French show that children’s first articles are more likely to appear when the...
Researchers have long noted that a given child will variably produce a given morpheme. This has been...
One of the challenges for understanding the processes underlying the acquisition of phonology has be...
It has long been noted that children's early words are truncated in form, and that those forms show ...
English-speaking children have acquired phrase-final lengthening by the age of 2, but other aspects ...
English-speaking children have acquired phrase-final lengthening by the age of 2, but other aspects ...
Jakobson (1968) was one of the first to propose that children’s early utter-ances would exhibit ‘unm...
A growing body of research with typically developing children has begun to show that the acquisition...
The goal of this study is to examine the acquisition of prosody at the word level in early child Cat...
It has long been argued that prosodic cues may facilitate syntax acquisition (e.g., Morgan, 1986). P...
This study investigates possible prosodic explanations for children's variable production of French ...
Jakobson (1968) was one of the rst to propose that children’s early utter-ances would exhibit ‘unmar...
Purpose: Children variably produce grammatical morphemes at early stages of development, often omitt...
In language acquisition, children use prosody in their comprehension and production of utterances. I...
It is well known that children’s production of grammatical morphemes is variable. This variability h...
Studies of English and French show that children’s first articles are more likely to appear when the...
Researchers have long noted that a given child will variably produce a given morpheme. This has been...
One of the challenges for understanding the processes underlying the acquisition of phonology has be...
It has long been noted that children's early words are truncated in form, and that those forms show ...
English-speaking children have acquired phrase-final lengthening by the age of 2, but other aspects ...
English-speaking children have acquired phrase-final lengthening by the age of 2, but other aspects ...
Jakobson (1968) was one of the first to propose that children’s early utter-ances would exhibit ‘unm...
A growing body of research with typically developing children has begun to show that the acquisition...
The goal of this study is to examine the acquisition of prosody at the word level in early child Cat...
It has long been argued that prosodic cues may facilitate syntax acquisition (e.g., Morgan, 1986). P...
This study investigates possible prosodic explanations for children's variable production of French ...
Jakobson (1968) was one of the rst to propose that children’s early utter-ances would exhibit ‘unmar...
Purpose: Children variably produce grammatical morphemes at early stages of development, often omitt...
In language acquisition, children use prosody in their comprehension and production of utterances. I...
It is well known that children’s production of grammatical morphemes is variable. This variability h...