This thesis explores children’s acquisition of Shona morphology, in particular the acquisition of grammatical morphemes. The thesis describes how the morphology of Shona-speaking children develops. Of key interest is how they acquire inflections and the strategies they adopt. Slobin’s Operating Principles (henceforth OPs) are used as the framework for data analysis. The hypotheses that are used in this thesis generate from Slobin’s OPs. The data is analysed using morphological analysis and hypotheses derived from Slobin’s OPs. The findings of this study show that nouns and verbs are first produced in the form of content words without the grammatical morphemes (GMs) then they occur with a vowel that is part of the target GM. ...
This article concerns a traditional analysis of Shona morphology, which is based on a (positional) ...
After a brief discussion of the goals of scientific theory, especially in Linguistics, the article e...
Models arguing for a connection between morphological productivity and relative morpheme frequency h...
This study falls under the broad area of child language acquisition with specific focus on Shona mor...
This article falls under the broad area of child language acquisition and it aims to present an anal...
This research is aimed at investigating patterns of acquisition of Oromo inflectional morphology in ...
This article concerns a traditional analysis of Shona morphology, which is based on a (positional) c...
This dissertation is concerned with the morphology and tonology of Shona, a Bantu language spoken in...
This thesis investigates how Shona, an African language spoken in Zimbabwe deals with potentially on...
This article seeks to make a developmental study of variability in the acquisition of verb morpholog...
The following work consists of a study of the morphology of some of the Central Shona dialect-groups...
This archive contains a unique collection of naturalistic child language data collected between 2017...
This paper intends to provide morphonological descriptive analysis of relative morpheme forms in Kis...
A dissertation submitted to the department of African languages and literature of the University of ...
Code-mixing (hereafter CM) is a worldwide communicative phenomenon that obtains in language contact ...
This article concerns a traditional analysis of Shona morphology, which is based on a (positional) ...
After a brief discussion of the goals of scientific theory, especially in Linguistics, the article e...
Models arguing for a connection between morphological productivity and relative morpheme frequency h...
This study falls under the broad area of child language acquisition with specific focus on Shona mor...
This article falls under the broad area of child language acquisition and it aims to present an anal...
This research is aimed at investigating patterns of acquisition of Oromo inflectional morphology in ...
This article concerns a traditional analysis of Shona morphology, which is based on a (positional) c...
This dissertation is concerned with the morphology and tonology of Shona, a Bantu language spoken in...
This thesis investigates how Shona, an African language spoken in Zimbabwe deals with potentially on...
This article seeks to make a developmental study of variability in the acquisition of verb morpholog...
The following work consists of a study of the morphology of some of the Central Shona dialect-groups...
This archive contains a unique collection of naturalistic child language data collected between 2017...
This paper intends to provide morphonological descriptive analysis of relative morpheme forms in Kis...
A dissertation submitted to the department of African languages and literature of the University of ...
Code-mixing (hereafter CM) is a worldwide communicative phenomenon that obtains in language contact ...
This article concerns a traditional analysis of Shona morphology, which is based on a (positional) ...
After a brief discussion of the goals of scientific theory, especially in Linguistics, the article e...
Models arguing for a connection between morphological productivity and relative morpheme frequency h...