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Language Acquisition and Change: A Morphosyntactic Perspective

TLDR
In an innovative take on the subject, the authors argue that morphosyntactic change in core areas of grammar, more specifically in grammatical domains referring to parameters of Universal Grammar, typically happens in settings involving second language acquisition.
Abstract
This is a theory of diachronic change based on studies of language acquisition. This monograph addresses diachronic change of languages in terms of a restructuring of speakers' internal grammatical knowledge. The authors answer questions about the circumstances surrounding grammatical change and attempt to identify causes, constructing a general theory of diachronic change consistent with insights from language acquisition. Historical linguistics commonly invokes the child as the principal agent of change. The authors therefore address the topic against the background of insights gained from extensive research into monolingual and bilingual language acquisition. In view of evidence showing that children are remarkably successful in reconstructing the grammars of their ambient languages, the authors reconsider a number of commonly held explanatory models of language change, including language contact and structural ambiguity in the input. Based on a variety of case studies, the discussion of these topics sheds new light on phenomena of change which have occupied historical linguists since the nineteenth century. In an innovative take on the subject, the authors argue that morphosyntactic change in core areas of grammar, more specifically in grammatical domains referring to parameters of Universal Grammar, typically happens in settings involving second language acquisition. The children acting as causal agents of restructuring are either (child) second language learners themselves or are continuously exposed to the speech of second language speakers of their target languages.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

New Structural Patterns in Moribund Grammar: Case Marking in Heritage German.

TL;DR: Heritage German speakers produce dative forms in line with established patterns of Differential Object Marking, suggesting a reallocated mapping of case and a more indexical discourse function, forging a tighter connection between morphosyntax and semantic properties.

Why Jesus and Job spoke bad Welsh : the origin and distribution of V2 orders in Middle Welsh

TL;DR: In this paper, a wide range of topics from historical to computational and corpus linguistics as well as synchronic and diachronic syntax and information structure are covered to address what has been a vexed problem in the study of Middle Welsh for a long time.
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Teasing Apart the Effects of Dominance, Transfer, and Processing in Reference Production by German–Italian Bilingual Adolescents

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate to what extent bilingual referring expressions involve transfer from one language to another, result from processing and dominance variables, and are the outcome of a process of language change.
Dissertation

Language change in post independence Namibian poetry in English

TL;DR: Thesis presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of English and Applied Linguistics at the Namibian University of Science and Technology (NUST).
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of sociocognitive salience in the acquisition of structured variation and linguistic diffusion: Evidence from quotative be like

Julia Davydova
- 01 Apr 2021 - 
TL;DR: This article found that sociocognitive saliency may have contributed to the generally accurate replication of the variable grammar for be like and, by this token, how it can inform existing models of language change.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Charting the learning path: cues to parameter setting

TL;DR: This article argues for an approach to grammar acquisition that builds on the cue-based parametric model of Dresher and Kaye (1990), in which cues to parameters become progressively more abstract and grammar-internal.
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The Diachronic Consequences of First and Second Language Acquisition: the Change from OV to VO

Fred Weerman
- 01 Jan 1993 - 
TL;DR: This paper argued that recent results in first and second language acquisition research point toward an interplay of these two factors in explaining language change, which is illustrated by a discussion of the change from OV to VO that took place in English, but no in Dutch.
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El desarrollo de la morfología de futuro en castellano y euskara en niños monolingües y bilingües

TL;DR: In this paper, the development of future morphology in Spanish and Basque by monolingual and bilingual children is analysed, and the authors come to the conclusion that the bilingual child develops both codes separately.