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Instructing Malaysian children with HFASD in English as a second language
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[In Press] The Italian Roots in Australian Soil (IRIAS) multilingual speech corpus : speech variation in two generations of Italo-Australians
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Lexical and morphological development : a case study of Malay English bilingual first language acquisition
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The acquisition of english grammar among Malay-English bilingual primary school children
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The influence of the environmental language (Lε) in Mandarin-English bilingual development : the case of transfer in wh- questions
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The development of plural expressions in a Malay-English bilingual child
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Exploring the acquisition of differential object marking (DOM) in Spanish as a second language
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Abstract:
The aim of this chapter is to explore the acquisition of differential object marking (DOM) in Spanish L2 and thus probe the higher level boundaries of the PT framework. In coining the term DOM, Bossong (1983-84, 1991) presented cross-linguistic data on more than 300 languages presenting this grammatical characteristic, whereby direct objects (OBJs) of transitive Vs either remain unmarked or are overtly marked by case or agreement on the basis of some semantic or pragmatic feature. This marking has since attracted considerable attention in linguistic theory (e.g., Aissen 2003; Dalrymple & Nikolaeva 2011; Leonetti 2004; Torrego 1998, 1999, among many others). Unlike the many purely structural approaches, Dalrymple & Nikolaeva’s (2011: 1-2) point out that DOM, in the many languages where it manifests itself, “encompasses syntactic, semantic and informational-structural differences between marked and unmarked objects”. So they propose that marked OBJs are associated, synchronically or historically, with the information-structure role of topic. Where the connection between marked OBJs and topicality has been lost through grammaticalisation, marked OBJs become associated with semantic features typical of topics, such as animacy, definiteness and specificity (Dalrymple & Nikolaeva 2011:1-2). Spanish is one of the languages exhibiting DOM, whereby some OBJs are marked with the preposition a, also known as marked accusative (Torrego 1998), prepositional accusative, personal a, or accusative a (Montrul & Bowles 2008; Tippets 2011).
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Keyword:
processability theory; second language acquisition; semantics; Spanish language; XXXXXX - Unknown
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URL: http://www.eurosla.org/monographs/EM03/7DOM.pdf http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:31955
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Grammatical Development in Second Languages: Exploring the Boundaries of Processability Theory
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Processability theory : theoretical bases and universal schedules
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Exploring processability theory-based hypotheses in the second language acquisition of a child with autism spectrum disorder
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Acquiring V2 in declarative sentences and constituent questions in German as a second language
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The development of case : a study of Serbian in contact with Australian English
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Academic literacy development : does video commentary feedback lead to greater engagement and response than conventional written feedback?
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