Developing interlanguage: Driving forces in children learning Dutch and German
Peter Jordens,Dagmar Bittner +1 more
TL;DR: This paper studied the early interlanguage systems of children learning Dutch and German as their mother tongue, and found that the developmental progress is driven by the acquisition of the formal properties of topicalization.
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Abstract: Abstract Spontaneous language learning both in children learning their mother tongue and in adults learning a second language shows that language development proceeds in a stage-wise manner. Given that a developmental stage is defined as a coherent linguistic system, utterances of language learners can be accounted for in terms of what (Selinker, Larry. 1972. Interlanguage. International Review of Applied Linguistics 10. 209–231) referred to with the term Interlanguage. This paper is a study on the early interlanguage systems of children learning Dutch and German as their mother tongue. The present child learner systems, so it is claimed, are coherent lexical systems based on types of verb-argument structure that are either agentive (as in Dutch: kannie bal pakke ‘cannot ball get’, or German: mag nich nase putzen ‘like not nose clean’) or non-agentive (as in Dutch: popje valt bijna ‘doll falls nearly’, or in German: ente fällt ‘duck falls’). At this lexical stage, functional morphology (e. g. morphological finiteness, tense), function words (e. g. auxiliary verbs, determiners) and word order variation are absent. For these typically developing children, both in Dutch and in German, it is claimed that developmental progress is driven by the acquisition of the formal properties of topicalization. It is, furthermore, argued that this feature seems to serve as the driving force in the instantiation of the functional, i. e. informational linguistic properties of the target-language system.
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Figures

Figure 2: Utterance structure at the lexical stage. 
Table 3: Dutch and German child data collected from two stages of language development. 
Figure 5: Reanalysis of the type-A structure. 
Table 1: Lexical structures in child Dutch and German. 
Figure 3: The topic situation TS and the element in topic position. 
Figure 1: The lexical structure of type A and type B. *As shown in Jolink (2009), Dutch children also produce examples with is instead of a modal verb. For example, die eisje is tieke (the girl is draw), paadje is alle biele opete (horsie is all wheels up-eat), toen is e vogel da vliege (then is a bird there fly). It might be used with an aspectual meaning such as ‘is being’.
Citations
中介语(interlanguage)初探
周彬彬
- 01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: The future of language in China is under threat, according to experts.
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Analysis of the Interlanguage of Second Language Learners: Implications for the Classroom
Yuanhua Lin
- 23 Nov 2022
TL;DR: The authors provides an analysis of the interlanguage of second language learners and the pedagogic implications, highlighting the role of social contexts in interlanguage development and suggests that interlanguage system can be changed by employing different teaching methods and strategies, creating linguistic and social contexts which are facilitative and delisting those that inhibit learning and classroom achievements.
References
中介语(interlanguage)初探
周彬彬
- 01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: The future of language in China is under threat, according to experts.
1.4K
•Book
First Language Acquisition
Eve V. Clark
- 28 Oct 2002
TL;DR: This book, drawing together the most recent findings in the field, and illustrated with examples from a wide range of experimental and observational studies, including the author's own diary observations, presents an essential and comprehensive guide to first language acquisition.
The Basic Variety (or: Couldn't natural languages be much simpler?)
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TL;DR: The authors discuss the implications of the fact that adult second language learners (outside the classroom) universally develop a wellstructured, efficient and simple form of language - the Basic Variety (BV).
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First Language Acquisition: List of tables, boxes, and figures
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