
Interfaces in Multilingualism
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- Interfaces in Multilingualism
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Dedication page
- Table of contents
- Foreword
- The prosody of early two-word utterances by German and Spanish monolingual and bilingual children
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Data and methodology
- 3. Analyses and results
- 3.1. Measurement of pauses
- 3.2. Analysis of the F0 curve: Resetting
- 3.3. Analysis of F0 curve: Pitch accent
- 3.4. Summary of results
- 4. General discussion
- 5. Conclusions
- Notes
- References
- Fundamental frequency in Mandarin and English*
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Previous research
- 3. Mandarin Chinese and English prosody: A brief comparison
- 4. The present experiment: Overview
- 5. Models of L2 phonological representation
- 6. Method
- 6.1. Participants
- 6.2. Materials
- 6.3. Procedure
- 6.4. Data analysis
- 7. Results
- 7.1. General performance data: Speech rate and pauses
- 7.2. English materials: Fundamental frequency
- 7.3. Mandarin materials
- 7.4. Summary
- 8. Discussion
- Notes
- References
- The development of forms and functions in the acquisition of tense and aspect in German-French bilingual children*
- 0. Introduction
- 1. Tense and aspect
- 1.1. Tense
- 1.2. Aspect
- 2. Tense and aspect in French and German
- 2.1. French
- 2.2. German
- 3. Methodology
- 3.1. Data
- 3.2. Methods of analysis
- 4. Results
- 4.1. French
- 4.2. German
- 5. Discussion
- 5.1. From function to form
- 5.2. From form to function
- 6. Summary and conclusions
- Notes
- References
- The acquisition of V2 and subordinate clauses in early successive acquisition of German*
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Sketching German sentence structure
- 3. The acquisition of V2 and finiteness in German L1 and L2
- 4. The study
- 4.1. The subjects
- 4.2. The data
- 4.3. The analysis
- 4.4. The results
- 5. Summary
- 6. Discussion
- Notes
- References
- Between 2L1- and child L2 acquisition
- 1. Introduction: Differences and similarities between mono- and bilingual acquisition
- 2. Methodology and subjects
- 3. The acquisition of a syntactic phenomenon: The position of the finite verb
- 3.1. Monolingual acquisition
- 3.2. Bilingual acquisition
- 3.3. Discussion
- 4. The acquisition of an interface phenomenon: The gender of the definite determiner in Dutch
- 4.1. Acquiring the definite determiner as monolingual child
- 4.2. Acquiring the definite determiner as a bilingual child
- 4.3. Discussion
- 5. Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- The emergence of article forms and functions in the language acquisition of a German-Italian bilingual child*
- 1. Formal and functional aspects of article use
- 2. On article-use
- 2.1. Formal explicitness
- 2.2. The form/function mapping
- 2.3. Cross-linguistic variation
- 3. Previous studies on article omission in the acquisition of German and Italian
- 4. Article functions and their acquisition
- 4.1. The distinction between specific- and non-specific entities
- 4.2. Types of non-specific reference
- 4.3. Types of specific reference
- 5. The study
- 5.1. Data
- 5.2. Article-use and omission
- 5.3. Article functions
- 6. The bilingual perspective
- 6.1. The emergence of syntax: Acceleration, delay and transfer
- 6.2. The emergence of functions
- 7. Conclusions
- Notes
- References
- Persistent problems with case morphology in L2 acquisition
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Morphological variability in L1 and L2 acquisition
- 3. Morphosyntactic background in Turkish
- 3.1. Turkish
- 3.2. The interaction of case and word order in Turkish
- 3.3. Related acquisitional facts in L1 Turkish
- 4. The present study: Data collection
- 5. Results
- 5.1. Tense marking
- 5.2. Subject-verb agreement
- 5.3. Subjects
- 5.4. Case marking
- 5.5. The interaction of word order with Case marking
- 6. Discussion
- 7. Conclusion and suggestions for further research
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- References
- Personal reference in Japanese
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Lexicalization
- 3. Word formation
- 4. Morpho-syntax
- 5. Combined references
- 6. Discussion
- Notes
- References
- Sign languages*
- Introductory remarks: The comparison of language production in two modalities
- 1. German Sign Language: Representation
- 1.1. Phonology: Manual components
- 1.2. Morphology
- 1.3. Syntactic serialization
- 2. Processing in language production
- 2.1. Slips of the hand
- 2.2. Distribution
- 2.3. Blends and fusions
- 2.4. Morphemes
- 2.5. Non-manual components
- 3. Interface conditions
- 3.1. Languages are perfect systems
- 3.2. Typology
- 3.3. Modality
- 4. Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Appendix
- Notational conventions
- Abbreviations
- Limits to modularity
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Properties of codeswitching
- 2.1. Switched complement clauses
- 2.2. Switched `extraclausal' discourse markers
- 2.3. Complex insertions
- 3. Cognitive Linguistic conceptualization of lexical items
- 4. Analysis
- 4.1. Data
- 4.2. Method
- 5. Constructional idioms
- 6. Novel creations
- 7. Quantitative pilot results
- 8. Conclusions
- Note
- References
- Index
- Hamburg Studies on Multilingualism
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