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Early and late preferences in relative clause attachment in Portuguese and Spanish
Author(s) -
Marcus Maia,
Eva M. Fernández,
Armanda Costa,
Maria do Carmo Lourenço-Gomes
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of portuguese linguistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2397-5563
pISSN - 1645-4537
DOI - 10.5334/jpl.151
Subject(s) - portuguese , romance languages , linguistics , relative clause , psychology , universality (dynamical systems) , brazilian portuguese , closure (psychology) , philosophy , political science , physics , quantum mechanics , law
This study presents new data about the cross-language application of the Late Closure principle (Frazier, 1978), whose universality was put in question by data from Spanish (Cuetos & Mitchell, 1988). Using sentences containing a restrictive relative clause unambiguously modifying the first or the second noun of a complex NP (os cúmplices do ladrão/o cúmplice dos ladrões que fugiram), this study compares the behavior of Brazilian and European Portuguese speakers participating in a self-paced reading task. The data confirm that, in early phases of processing, attachment preferences are driven by a locality principle such as Late Closure. Based on a review of studies on Portuguese, Spanish and other Romance languages, we argue that the high- versus low-attachment difference across languages emerges cleanly only in off-line tasks, such as questionnaire studies, thus limiting the types of explanations for the cross-linguistic differences. We also advance an explanation for the high attachment preferences found in unspeeded questionnaire studies based on the Implicit Prosody Hypothesis (Fodor, 1998a, 2002)

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