This article examines whether L2 acquisition of morphology and syntax develops
independently (the Separation Hypothesis) or not (the Rich Agreement
Hypothesis), focusing on the acquisition of Number specification on certain
Spanish quantifiers by French speakers. In Spanish, some quantifiers are
specified for Number and directly precede the head noun, in contrast to their
French counterparts where a dummy preposition de must appear
inside the DP. Results from a grammaticality judgement task and a production
task show that intermediate and advanced learners perform poorly on plural
inflection with some quantifiers, and reject the use of de.
This suggests that they have acquired Number specification on these quantifiers,
which allows Case marking on the following noun, but do not produce the
appropriate morphology. These results support the Separation Hypothesis, but not
the Rich Agreement Hypothesis.