Recent research shows that adult speakers of verb- vs. satellite-framed languages (Talmy, 2000) express motion events in language-specific ways in speech (Slobin 1996, 2004) and co-verbal gestures (Duncan 2005; Kita & Özyurek 2003; McNeill 1992). Although such findings suggest cross-linguistic differences in the expression of events, little is still known about their implications for first language acquisition. This paper examines how French and English adults and children (ages four and six) express Path and Manner in speech and gesture when describing voluntary motion presented in animated cartoons. The results show that English adults conflate Manner+Path in speech more often than French adults who frequently talk about Path only. Both groups gesture mainly about Path only, but English adults also conflate Manner+Path into single gestures, whereas French adults never do so. Children in both languages are predominantly adult-like in speech and gesture from age four on, but also display developmental progressions with increasing age. Finally, speech and gestures are predominantly co-expressive in both language groups and at all ages. When modalities differ, English adults typically provide less information in gesture (Path) than in speech (Manner+Path; ‘Manner modulation’ phenomenon), whereas French adults express complementary information in speech (Manner) and gesture (Path). The discussion highlights theoretical implications of such bi-modal analyses for acquisition and gesture studies
Rochanavibhata, Sirada, Jessica Yung-Chieh Chuang & Viorica Marian
2023. Bilingual mothers and children gesture differently across native and second languages. Journal of Monolingual and Bilingual Speech 5:2 ► pp. 201 ff.
Debreslioska, Sandra & Marianne Gullberg
2020. The semantic content of gestures varies with definiteness, information status and clause structure. Journal of Pragmatics 168 ► pp. 36 ff.
Debreslioska, Sandra & Marianne Gullberg
2022. Information Status Predicts the Incidence of Gesture in Discourse: An Experimental Study. Discourse Processes 59:10 ► pp. 791 ff.
AZIZ, JASMINE R. & ELENA NICOLADIS
2019. “My French is rusty”: Proficiency and bilingual gesture use in a majority English community. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 22:04 ► pp. 826 ff.
Colletta, Jean-Marc, Ramona Kunene Nicolas & Michèle Guidetti
2018. Indicating verbs as typologically unique constructions: Reconsidering verb ‘agreement’ in sign languages. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 3:1
Wessel-Tolvig, Bjørn & Patrizia Paggio
2016. Revisiting the thinking-for-speaking hypothesis: Speech and gesture representation of motion in Danish and Italian. Journal of Pragmatics 99 ► pp. 39 ff.
McNeill, David
2014. Gesture–speech unity. Language, Interaction and Acquisition 5:2 ► pp. 137 ff.
Gullberg, Marianne
2012. Bilingualism and Gesture. In The Handbook of Bilingualism and Multilingualism, ► pp. 417 ff.
Hickmann, Maya
2012. Diversité des langues et acquisition du langage : espace et temporalité chez l'enfant. Langages n° 188:4 ► pp. 25 ff.
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