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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Knowledge of Reflexives in a Second Language

Margaret Thomas
Boston College

1993. x, 234 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2469 9 / EUR 99.00
978 1 55619 241 8 / USD 149.00
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This study addresses the debate about whether adult language learners have access to the principles and parameters of universal grammar in constructing the grammar of a second language. The data are based on two related experiments. The first examines the interpretation of English reflexive pronouns by native speakers of Japanese and of Spanish. The second experiment examines the interpretation of the Japanese reflexive zibun by native speakers of English and of Chinese. Three hypotheses are evaluated: (a) that UG is unavailable, and that processing strategies or other non-linguistic principles guide second language acquisition; (b) that UG is available only in the form in which it is instantiated in the learner's native language; (c) that UG is fully available, including the ability to re-set parameters to UG-sanctioned values not instantiated in the learner's native language. The results show that learners observe constraints defined by Manzini and Wexler's parameterized version of Principle A of the binding theory and support the proposal that adult learners have access to universal grammar. A final chapter reviews the experimental data in the light of recent accounts of cross-linguistic variation in the grammar of anaphors which reject parameterization of the binding principles in favor of a “movement to INFL” analysis.


Table of contents

Acknowledgments
ix
List of Abbreviations
xi
1. Language Acquisition and linguistic theory
1
2. Constraints on the interpretation of anaphors
19
3. Acquisition of constraints on anaphors
35
4. L2 learners’ knowledge of English reflexives
67
5. L2 learners’ knowledge of Japanese zibun
115
6. Alternative views
151
7. Conclusion
173
Notes
187
References
215
Index
229