The comprehension of constituent questions is an important topic for language acquisition research and for applications in the diagnosis of language impairment. This article presents the results of a study investigating the comprehension of different types of questions by 5-year-old, typically developing children across 19 European countries, 18 different languages, and 7 language (sub-)families. The study investigated the effects of two factors on question formation: (a) whether the question contains a simple interrogative word like 'who' or a complex one like 'which princess', and (b) whether the question word was related to the sentential subject or object position of the verb. The findings show that there is considerable variation among languages, but the two factors mentioned consistently affect children's performance. The cross-linguistic variation shows that three linguistic factors facilitate children's understanding of questions: having overt case morphology, having a single lexical item for both 'who' and 'which', and the use of synthetic verbal forms.

Sauerland, U., Grohmann, K., Guasti, M., Andelković, D., Argus, R., Armon Lotem, S., et al. (2016). How do 5-year-olds understand questions? Differences in languages across Europe. FIRST LANGUAGE, 36(3), 169-202 [10.1177/0142723716640236].

How do 5-year-olds understand questions? Differences in languages across Europe

GUASTI, MARIA TERESA;AROSIO, FABRIZIO;
2016

Abstract

The comprehension of constituent questions is an important topic for language acquisition research and for applications in the diagnosis of language impairment. This article presents the results of a study investigating the comprehension of different types of questions by 5-year-old, typically developing children across 19 European countries, 18 different languages, and 7 language (sub-)families. The study investigated the effects of two factors on question formation: (a) whether the question contains a simple interrogative word like 'who' or a complex one like 'which princess', and (b) whether the question word was related to the sentential subject or object position of the verb. The findings show that there is considerable variation among languages, but the two factors mentioned consistently affect children's performance. The cross-linguistic variation shows that three linguistic factors facilitate children's understanding of questions: having overt case morphology, having a single lexical item for both 'who' and 'which', and the use of synthetic verbal forms.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Agreement; Case; Comprehension; Cross-linguistic; Questions; Syntax; Wh-phrases;
Agreement; Case; Comprehension; Cross-linguistic; Questions; Syntax; Wh-phrases; Language and Linguistics; Linguistics and Language; 3304
English
2016
36
3
169
202
none
Sauerland, U., Grohmann, K., Guasti, M., Andelković, D., Argus, R., Armon Lotem, S., et al. (2016). How do 5-year-olds understand questions? Differences in languages across Europe. FIRST LANGUAGE, 36(3), 169-202 [10.1177/0142723716640236].
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/121269
Citazioni
  • Scopus 6
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 5
Social impact