Purpose: Some variability in children's early productions of grammatical morphemes reflects phonological factors. For example, production of 3rd person singular -s is increased in utterance-final versus utterance-medial position, and in simple versus cluster codas (e.g., sees vs. hits). Understanding the factors that govern such variability is an important step toward modeling developmental processes. In this study, the authors examined the generality of these effects by determining whether position and coda complexity influence production of plural -s, which phonologically manifests the same as 3rd person singular -s. Method: The authors used an elicited imitation task to examine the speech of 16 two-year-olds. Eight plural nouns (half con...
Children's early productions are highly variable. Findings from children's early productions of gram...
<p>Inflectional morphology has been intensively studied as a model of language productivity. However...
This paper addresses the issue of intra-personal variability in second Language development, stating...
Children’s early use of grammatical morphemes is notoriously variable. Recent findings indicate that...
Purpose: Prosodic and articulatory factors influence children’s production of inflectional morphemes...
Purpose: Children variably produce grammatical morphemes at early stages of development, often omitt...
Purpose: Children variably produce grammatical morphemes at early stages of development, often omitt...
Previous research shows that two-year-olds' third person singular -s and plural -s are produced more...
Previous research shows that 2-year-olds' production of third person singular -s, but not plural -s,...
Purpose: Evidence from children's spontaneous speech suggests that utterance length and utterance po...
Purpose: Children acquire /-z/ syllabic plurals (e.g., buses) later than /-s, -z/ segmental plurals ...
Purpose: Two-year-olds produce third person singular -s more accurately on verbs in sentence-final p...
The correct use of an affix, such as the English plural or past tense suffixes, is generally assumed...
Children utilize several factors as they acquire the English plural. Children consider the meaning o...
The study of morphology, and more specifically the English plural, encompasses many aspects of the c...
Children's early productions are highly variable. Findings from children's early productions of gram...
<p>Inflectional morphology has been intensively studied as a model of language productivity. However...
This paper addresses the issue of intra-personal variability in second Language development, stating...
Children’s early use of grammatical morphemes is notoriously variable. Recent findings indicate that...
Purpose: Prosodic and articulatory factors influence children’s production of inflectional morphemes...
Purpose: Children variably produce grammatical morphemes at early stages of development, often omitt...
Purpose: Children variably produce grammatical morphemes at early stages of development, often omitt...
Previous research shows that two-year-olds' third person singular -s and plural -s are produced more...
Previous research shows that 2-year-olds' production of third person singular -s, but not plural -s,...
Purpose: Evidence from children's spontaneous speech suggests that utterance length and utterance po...
Purpose: Children acquire /-z/ syllabic plurals (e.g., buses) later than /-s, -z/ segmental plurals ...
Purpose: Two-year-olds produce third person singular -s more accurately on verbs in sentence-final p...
The correct use of an affix, such as the English plural or past tense suffixes, is generally assumed...
Children utilize several factors as they acquire the English plural. Children consider the meaning o...
The study of morphology, and more specifically the English plural, encompasses many aspects of the c...
Children's early productions are highly variable. Findings from children's early productions of gram...
<p>Inflectional morphology has been intensively studied as a model of language productivity. However...
This paper addresses the issue of intra-personal variability in second Language development, stating...