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Learner language morphology as a window to crosslinguistic influences: A key structure analysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2017

Ilmari Ivaska
Affiliation:
Department of Interpretation and Translation, University of Bologna, Corso della Repubblica 136, Forli (FC), Italy. [email protected]
Kirsti Siitonen
Affiliation:
Department of Finnish and Finno-Ugric Languages, FI-20014 University of Turku, Finland. [email protected]
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Abstract

The study of crosslinguistic influences (CLI) has proven that morphosyntactic features exhibit CLI. Technical development and novel resources have enabled detection-based approaches, where potential CLI are revealed based on their observed frequencies and on differences between learners with different language backgrounds. The two research questions are as follows: (i) How construction-specific typological (dis)similarities between L1 and L2 affect the frequencies of linguistic features? (ii) Can such (dis)similarities be detected by comparing feature frequency data of L2? The data come from the International Corpus of Learner Finnish, and the methodology applied is the key structure analysis. The results support the applicability of the method: they show that constructional similarities may trigger CLI construction by construction, irrespective of the general similarities or genealogical categorizations. The results further imply the importance of controlling the genre-related and topical variation to account for skewed nature of the data when dealing with naturally occurring learner language data.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Nordic Association of Linguistics 2017 

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