Catalog Search
 
Advanced Search

My shopping cart cart icon
Your cart is empty

My wish list wishlist icon
Your wish list is empty



Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
Home

Fossilized Second Language Grammars

The acquisition of grammatical gender

Florencia Franceschina
Lancaster University

2005. xxiv, 288 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 5298 2 / EUR 115.00 / USD 173.00
Add to shopping cart

e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9398 5 / EUR 115.00 / USD 173.00
Ordering information

Add to wish list

This monograph is a theoretical and empirical investigation into the mechanisms and causes of successful and unsuccessful adult second language acquisition.Couched within a generative framework, the study explores how a learner’s first language and the age at which they acquire their second language may contribute to the L2 knowledge that they can ultimately attain. The empirical study focuses on a group of very advanced L2 speakers, and through a series of tests aims to discover what underpins their near mastery of grammatical gender and other grammatical properties.The book explores an account of persistent selective divergence based on the idea that child and adult learners are fundamentally similar, except that in adults the L1 plays the role of a fairly rigid filter of the linguistic input. The impossibility of representing the new target language other than by using the building blocks of the previously established L1 is argued to be the main reason why near but not totally native like language representations are formed and become established in adult L2 learners.


Table of contents

Abstract
ix
Acknowledgements
xi
List of appendices
xiii
List of tables
xv–xvii
List of figures
xix–xxi
Abbreviations
xxiii–xxiv
Introduction
1–8
Definitions, assumptions and predictions
9–41
Competing theories of NS/NNS ultimate attainment differences
43–67
Gender
69–120
The empirical study
121–190
Discussion
191–205
Notes
207–214
References
215–240
Appendices
241–281
Name index
283–286
Subject index
287–288


Franceschina's study makes a valuable addition to the L2 literature: By virtue of finely designed experimental tasks, the study produces a granular understanding of the linguistic loci of the particular learning problem (i.e., L2 endstate, nontargetlike representation of Spanish grammatical gender), and at the same time offers substantive insights on broader issues such as interlearner variability and the role of L1 in SLA ultimate attainment.
ZhaoHong Han,Columbia University,in Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 29(4), 2007