Search results for " morphosyntax"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

The acquisition of L2 Italian morphosyntax by low- or non-literate adult learners

2020

L2 morphosyntax literacy adult migrants L2 Italian
researchProduct

La morfologia nominale nell’italiano L2 di minori stranieri non accompagnati: analfabetismo, acquisizione, didattica

2019

Il contributo esplora la possibilità di tracciare specificità nel processo di acquisizione della morfologia nominale nell’italiano L2 di apprendenti privi di competenze di scrittura in lingua madre e debolmente o per nulla scolarizzati al loro arrivo in Italia, rispetto al generale progredire delle varietà di apprendimento, così come quest’ultimo viene descritto nella letteratura di riferimento. L’indagine si avvale di un corpus di italiano L2 realizzato nell’ambito dei corsi di lingua e di alfabetizzazione della Scuola di Lingua italiana per Stranieri dell’Università di Palermo.

Settore L-FIL-LET/12 - Linguistica ItalianaL2 morphosyntax L2 Italian Literacy
researchProduct

Emerging Constructions in the L2 Italian Spoken by Low Literate Migrants

2019

The emergence of autonomous interlanguage constructions is widely recognised in the literature on L2 Italian. These constructions involve the overgeneralisation of functional forms learners are in the process of acquiring, e.g., siamo in siamo mangiare &lsquo

lcsh:Language and LiteratureL2 Italian050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageconstructionsSubconsciousmedia_common.quotation_subjectFirst languageL2 Italian L2 morphosyntax Second language acquisition Literacy Adult migrnts05 social sciencesVerbliteracyL2 Italian; Constructions; Low- and non-literate adult learners050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsLiteracyOvergeneralisationInterlanguagelcsh:P0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSociology10. No inequalitymedia_common
researchProduct

The article a(n) in English quantifying expressions: A default marker of cardinality

2020

Certain English quantificational expressions feature what appears to be an indefinite article, e.g. 'a bunch, a few, a hundred'. These can be divided into three types of quantifying expressions: pseudopartitives ('a lot, a bunch, a ton'), article-requiring quantifiers ('a few, a couple, a hundred'), and article-free quantifiers ('three, many, several'); article-free quantifiers have an article under certain circumstances, e.g. modification by an adjective ('a surprising 30 …'). While standard analyses would take the article in these expressions to be a D head, it is argued here that the article is not in D, nor is it singular or count, as evidenced by its (lack of an) interaction with verba…

pseudopartitivesLanguage. Linguistic theory. Comparative grammarP101-410cardinalityquantifiersindefinite articledeterminersquantifiers; indefinite article; pseudopartitives; numerals; determiners; cardinalitysyntax morphosyntaxnumeralsGlossa: a journal of general linguistics
researchProduct