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    Logical Form in the Second Language: An Investigation into Quantification in Interlanguage

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    Date
    2019-05-01
    Author
    Abu Helal, Abdel-Rahman
    Department
    Linguistics
    Advisor(s)
    Nicholas Fleisher
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    Abstract
    In coping with variability in morphological production in L2 acquisition, which represents a challenge for the parameter (re-)setting theories, Lardiere (2008) proposed the feature reassembly hypothesis in which sequential difficulty in L2 acquisition of morpho-syntactic features is captured by the processes of (re-)assembly and mapping of features onto their morphological realizations. Slabakova (2009, 2013) incorporated Lardiere’s proposal in establishing a scale of difficulty in learning semantic properties (e.g. definiteness) which is based on whether reassembly is needed and whether the universal meaning is obtained by overt morphology or context (See also Ramchand & Svenonius, 2008). In considering the truth-conditional aspect of meaning, the feature-based framework is not powerful enough to account for the variability of interpretations that L2 learners come to learn. Take as an example the acquisition of English comparatives by Japanese L2 learners. We discuss the L2 acquisition of a special type of syntaxsemantics mismatch in which in which a certain meaningprimitive (i.e., comparative and tense) is expressed using different truth conditions in the native and target language.
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/91931
    Type
    dissertation
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    • UW Milwaukee Electronic Theses and Dissertations

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