Child Language and Developmental Dysphasia : Linguistic Studies of the Acquisition of German.
The subject of this two part work is the acquisition of language structure in which the development of syntax and morphology is examined by investigations on children without language problems and on children with developmental dysphasia. The author uses a comparative acquisition study to provide in...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés Alemán |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
1991.
|
Colección: | Studies in speech pathology and clinical linguistics ;
v. 2. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- CHILD LANGUAGE AND DEVELOPMENTAL DYSPHASIA Linguistic Studies of the Acquisition of German; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Preface; Table of Contents; Introduction; PART I: FIRST LANGUAGE ACQUISITION; 1. Theoretical approaches in language acquisition research; 1.1 The functionalist approach; 1.2 The theory of Operating Principles; 1.2.1 A sketch of Slobin's model; 1.2.2 On the analysis of transitivity markers; 1.2.3 On the theoretical status of Operating Principles; 1.3 Learnability theory; 1.3.1 Learnability constraints; 1.3.2 Grammatical theory and learnability.
- 1.3.3 On the structure of the language acquisition device2. Early child grammars; 2.1 Some features of Stage I in German child language; 2.2 A phrase structure grammar for phase II; 2.3 Learnability considerations on syntactic categorisation; 2.4 Parameter theory and the acquisition of word order; 2.4.1 Pinker's analysis; 2.4.2 An alternative solution within GB-theory; 3. The grammar of a three year-old; 3.1 Some features of phase IV in German child language; 3.2 Syntactic structures in phase IV; 3.3 Learning mechanisms for inflectional elements.
- 3.3.1 On the construction of morphological paradigms3.3.2 Verb inflection in German child language; PART II: DEVELOPMENTAL DYSPHASIA; 4. Grammar acquisition and dysphasia (with particular reference to the research situation in West Germany); 4.1 Linguistic features; 4.2 Psycholinguistic aspects; 4.3 Aims and basic hypotheses; 4.4 On the design of the empirical investigation; 4.4.1 Selecting the children; 4.4.2 Analysing the linguistic data; 4.4.3 Overview of the data investigated; 5. Grammatical units; 5.1 Nominal elements and the structure of the noun phrase.
- 5.2 Adverbial elements and prepositional phrases5.3 Verbal elements; 5.4 Conjunctions; 6. Selected areas of the inflectional system; 6.1 Case markings; 6.1.1 On the form and function of case markings in German; 6.1.2 Case markings in dysphasia; 6.1.3 A comparison with the acquisition of case morphology in normal children; 6.2 Verb inflection; 6.2.1 On subject-verb agreement in dysphasia; 6.2.2 Functional analyses of the inflection of verbs in dysphasia; 7. Word order; 7.1 Verb placement; 7.1.1 Overview: V1,V2 and verb-final patterns; 7.1.2 Verb placement and verb inflection.
- 7.1.3 Verb placement and verbal elements7.2 Argument order; 7.3 The position of the negator; 8. Learnability theory and the acquisition of grammar; 8.1 Child language development; 8.2 Developmental dysphasia; 9. Appendix; 9.1 Profile charts; 9.2 Transcripts; Transcript: andreas 1; Transcript: andreas 2; Transcript: anja 1; Transcript: anja 2; Transcript: jonas 1; Transcript: jonas 2; Transcript: julia 1; Transcript: julia 2; Transcript: klaus 1; Transcript: klaus 2; Transcript: patrick; Transcript: petra 1; Transcript: petra 2; Transcript: petra 3; Transcript: Stefan; Transcript: sven.