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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Incomplete Acquisition in Bilingualism

Re-examining the Age Factor

Silvina A. Montrul
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

2008. x, 312 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 4175 7 / EUR 99.00 / USD 149.00
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PaperbackIn stock
978 90 272 4180 1 / EUR 36.00 / USD 54.00

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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9041 0 / EUR 99.00 / USD 149.00
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Age effects have played a particularly prominent role in some theoretical perspectives on second language acquisition. This book takes an entirely new perspective on this issue by re-examining these theories in light of the existence of apparently similar non-native outcomes in adult heritage speakers who, unlike adult second language learners, acquired two or more languages in childhood. Despite having been exposed to their family language early in life, many of these speakers never fully acquire, or later lose, aspects of their first language sometime in childhood. The book examines the structural characteristics of "incomplete" grammatical states and highlights how age of acquisition is related to the type of linguistic knowledge and behavior that emerges in L1 and L2 acquisition under different environmental circumstances. By underscoring age of acquisition as a unifying factor in the study of L2 acquisition and L1 attrition, it is claimed that just as there are age effects in L2 acquisition, there are also age effects, or even perhaps a critical period, in L1 attrition. The book covers adult L2 acquisition, attrition in adults and in children, and includes a comparison of adult heritage language speakers and second language learners.


Table of contents

Acknowledgments
xi–x
Chapter 1. Foundations
1–25
Chapter 2. Second language acquisition
27–61
Chapter 3. First language attrition in adults
63–91
Chapter 4. Bilingualism in early childhood
93–129
Chapter 5. Bilingualism in middle and late childhood
131–159
Chapter 6. Incomplete L1 acquisition in adults
161–206
Chapter 7. Incomplete L1 and L2 acquisition in adults
207–248
Chapter 8. Implications
249–275
References
277–301
Index of authors
303–307
Index of terms
309–312


This important and well-written book offers a timely and well-balanced review of recent research on non-native attainment. Montrul examines in great detail how age of acquisition is related to non-native outcomes, not only in L2 acquisition, but also in L1 attrition and in incomplete L1 acquisition as a result of early L2 acquisition, and how experiential factors interact with the age factor in effecting these outcomes. This book is a mine of information and is highly recommended to students of language acquisition, language attrition and bilingualism alike.
Theo Bongaerts, University of Nijmegen