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The acquisition of ergative marking in Kaluli, Ku Waru and Duna (Trans New Guinea)
Author(s) -
Allan Rumsey,
Lila San Roque,
Bambi B. Schieffelin
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
trends in language acquisition research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
ISSN - 1569-0644
DOI - 10.1075/tilar.9.06rum
Subject(s) - ergative case , linguistics , new guinea , pace , noun phrase , noun , computer science , history , mathematics , geography , philosophy , ethnology , combinatorics , transitive relation , geodesy
In this chapter we present material on the acquisition of ergative marking on noun phrases in three languages of Papua New Guinea: Kaluli, Ku Waru, and Duna. The expression of ergativity in all the languages is broadly similar, but sensitive to language-specific features, and this pattern of similarity and difference is reflected in the available acquisition data. Children acquire adult-like ergative marking at about the same pace, reaching similar levels of mastery by 3;00 despite considerable differences in morphological complexity of ergative marking among the languages. What may be more important – as a factor in accounting for the relative uniformity of acquisition in this respect – are the similarities in patterns of interactional scaffolding that emerge from a comparison of the three cases.

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