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THE PRODUCTION OF SUBJECT-VERB AGREEMENT AMONG SWEDISH AND CHINESE SECOND LANGUAGE SPEAKERS OF ENGLISH
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 April 2018
Abstract
This study uses a sentence completion task with Swedish and Chinese L2 English speakers to investigate how L1 morphosyntax and L2 proficiency influence L2 English subject-verb agreement production. Chinese has limited nominal and verbal number morphology, while Swedish has robust noun phrase (NP) morphology but does not number-mark verbs. Results showed that like L1 English speakers, both L2 groups used grammatical and conceptual number to produce subject-verb agreement. However, only L1 Chinese speakers—and less-proficient speakers in both L2 groups—were similarly influenced by grammatical and conceptual number when producing the subject NP. These findings demonstrate how L2 proficiency, perhaps combined with cross-linguistic differences, influence L2 production and underscore that encoding of noun and verb number are not independent.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018
Footnotes
We thank Marianne Gullberg at Lunds Universitet in Sweden for help with collection of the L1 Swedish speaker data. We also thank Jack DiMidio, Marta Millar, Alexa Rossi, and Ted Smith for help with the L1 Chinese and L1 English speaker data collection and transcription, and two reviewers for their valuable comments. This research was funded in part by the National Science Foundation under grant OISE-0968369 (PI: J. F. Kroll; co-PIs: P. E. Dussias and J. G. van Hell).
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