This entry provides an overview of different theoretical approaches to children's acquisition of syntactic categories and rules. Whereas the generative–nativist approach suggests that syntactic categories and rules are innate and only require minimal input, the usage‐based approach argues that children gradually derive them from their input. These two predictions are tested by looking at children's acquisition of the past tense, word‐order rules for simple sentences, and their acquisition of complex sentences
The theory that language acquisition is guided and constrained by inborn linguistic knowledge is ass...
Every normal child acquires a language in just a few years. By 3- or 4-years-old, children have effe...
Chapter in Language Processing and Language Acquisition, edited by Lyn Frazier and Jill De Villiers....
1. UG as the outcome of the acquisition process It is a common position in generative acquisition st...
"It is a common position in generative acquisition studies to accept Chomsky's view that first langu...
In the past 40 years, there has been much debate between nativists and empiricists about how childre...
Learnability of syntax 2 The learnability of abstract syntactic principles Children acquiring langua...
This chapter provides an overview of theoretical issues and core empirical findings in cross-linguis...
210 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1983.All normal children succeed i...
In this chapter, a number of studies exploring young children's development of grammar within the Co...
This chapter provides a synoptic account of the usage-based approach to language acquisition, in bot...
Published as Coyote Papers: Working Papers in Linguistics from A-Z, Unification Based Approaches to ...
This research represents an attempt to model the child’s acquisition of syntactic categories. A comp...
A model of syntax acquisition must include powerful learning procedures if it is to account for the ...
Preferably, the properties of grammar can be derived from the following factors: (i) The primary lin...
The theory that language acquisition is guided and constrained by inborn linguistic knowledge is ass...
Every normal child acquires a language in just a few years. By 3- or 4-years-old, children have effe...
Chapter in Language Processing and Language Acquisition, edited by Lyn Frazier and Jill De Villiers....
1. UG as the outcome of the acquisition process It is a common position in generative acquisition st...
"It is a common position in generative acquisition studies to accept Chomsky's view that first langu...
In the past 40 years, there has been much debate between nativists and empiricists about how childre...
Learnability of syntax 2 The learnability of abstract syntactic principles Children acquiring langua...
This chapter provides an overview of theoretical issues and core empirical findings in cross-linguis...
210 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1983.All normal children succeed i...
In this chapter, a number of studies exploring young children's development of grammar within the Co...
This chapter provides a synoptic account of the usage-based approach to language acquisition, in bot...
Published as Coyote Papers: Working Papers in Linguistics from A-Z, Unification Based Approaches to ...
This research represents an attempt to model the child’s acquisition of syntactic categories. A comp...
A model of syntax acquisition must include powerful learning procedures if it is to account for the ...
Preferably, the properties of grammar can be derived from the following factors: (i) The primary lin...
The theory that language acquisition is guided and constrained by inborn linguistic knowledge is ass...
Every normal child acquires a language in just a few years. By 3- or 4-years-old, children have effe...
Chapter in Language Processing and Language Acquisition, edited by Lyn Frazier and Jill De Villiers....