Research on second language acquisition and bilingual development strongly suggests that when a previously monolingual speaker becomes multilingual, the different languages do not exist in isolation: they are closely linked, dependent on each other, and there is constant interaction between these different knowledge systems. Theoretical frameworks of bilingual development acknowledge this insofar as they usually draw heavily on evidence of how the native language influences subsequent languages, and how and to what degree this influence can eventually be overcome. The fact that such crosslinguistic transfer is not a one-way street, and that the native language is similarly influenced by later learned languages, on the other hand, is often d...
Speakers who live in an L2 environment for an extended period of time often experience change in the...
This paper compares monolingual acquisition to the acquisition of two languages from infancy. Basis ...
Late bilinguals who spend (part of) their adult lives in an environment where a language other than ...
The overwhelming bias for investigations of bilingualism is to focus on the increase of knowledge an...
International audienceThis collection of articles provides theoretical foundations and perspectives ...
The most important and most controversial issue for bilingualism research is the question why childr...
Speakers who routinely use more than one language may not use any of their languages in ways which a...
Introduction The multi-competence approach views bilingual development as a wholistic process that i...
The overwhelming bias for investigations of bilingualism is to focus on the increase of knowledge an...
This highly original and innovative book is a must-read for all interested in the complex relationsh...
At the heart of virtually all research on bilingualism, if not on language in general, is the recogn...
International audienceThe study of L1 attrition is currently entering its third decade. However, aft...
Yip and Matthews ’ latest book makes a welcome new contribution to an expanding body of literature o...
A controversial topic in research on second language acquisition is whether residual variability and...
International audienceThis issue consists of a collection of papers that focus on structural/grammat...
Speakers who live in an L2 environment for an extended period of time often experience change in the...
This paper compares monolingual acquisition to the acquisition of two languages from infancy. Basis ...
Late bilinguals who spend (part of) their adult lives in an environment where a language other than ...
The overwhelming bias for investigations of bilingualism is to focus on the increase of knowledge an...
International audienceThis collection of articles provides theoretical foundations and perspectives ...
The most important and most controversial issue for bilingualism research is the question why childr...
Speakers who routinely use more than one language may not use any of their languages in ways which a...
Introduction The multi-competence approach views bilingual development as a wholistic process that i...
The overwhelming bias for investigations of bilingualism is to focus on the increase of knowledge an...
This highly original and innovative book is a must-read for all interested in the complex relationsh...
At the heart of virtually all research on bilingualism, if not on language in general, is the recogn...
International audienceThe study of L1 attrition is currently entering its third decade. However, aft...
Yip and Matthews ’ latest book makes a welcome new contribution to an expanding body of literature o...
A controversial topic in research on second language acquisition is whether residual variability and...
International audienceThis issue consists of a collection of papers that focus on structural/grammat...
Speakers who live in an L2 environment for an extended period of time often experience change in the...
This paper compares monolingual acquisition to the acquisition of two languages from infancy. Basis ...
Late bilinguals who spend (part of) their adult lives in an environment where a language other than ...