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1
Child Heritage Language Development: An Interplay Between Cross-Linguistic Influence and Language-External Factors
In: Front Psychol (2021)
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2
Internal and External Factors in Heritage Language Acquisition : Evidence From Heritage Russian in Israel, Germany, Norway, Latvia and the United Kingdom
Rodina, Yulia [Verfasser]; Kupisch, Tanja [Verfasser]; Meir, Natalia [Verfasser]. - Konstanz : KOPS Universität Konstanz, 2020
DNB Subject Category Language
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3
Internal and External Factors in Heritage Language Acquisition : Evidence From Heritage Russian in Israel, Germany, Norway, Latvia and the United Kingdom
In: Frontiers in Education ; 5 (2020). - 20. - Frontiers Media. - eISSN 2504-284X (2020)
Abstract: In this paper, we consider elicited production data (real and nonce words tasks) from five different studies on the acquisition of grammatical gender in Heritage Russian, comparing children growing up in Germany, Israel, Norway, Latvia, and the United Kingdom. The children grow up in diverse heritage language backgrounds, ranging from small groups (in Norway) to large communities (in Latvia). Furthermore, the children vary with respect to family background (one or two Russian-speaking parents) as well as the intensity of instruction in the heritage language through complementary schools. Russian has a three-gender system (masculine, feminine, and neuter) with gender cues varying in their transparency, predictability and frequency. The majority languages that these children speak differ widely with respect to the linguistic property studied: While English has no grammatical gender, Latvian and Hebrew both have two-gender systems (feminine and masculine), as well as the Oslo and Tromsø dialects of Norwegian (masculine and neuter), while German has a three-gender system, with a feminine-masculine-neuter distinction, like Russian. However, the transparency of gender assignment varies greatly, with Hebrew and Latvian having predictable gender based on the shape of the noun, like Russian, while gender assignment in Norwegian is generally arbitrary and German is semi-transparent, with gender assignment tendencies rather than rules. The focus in the paper is on language-internal and language-external factors that may be (non-)facilitative for the acquisition of gender in Russian, i.e., possible cross-linguistic influence from the majority language and the importance of background factors, such as family situation, age at start of kindergarten, size of the Russian-speaking community, current exposure to Heritage Russian instruction, and the main language of instruction. Our results show no significant differences across groups with respect to the majority language, but clear effects of background variables, with family type, age, and current exposure to Heritage Russian instruction as the most important ones. ; published
Keyword: child bilingualism; crosslinguistic influence; ddc:400; grammatical gender; heritage language education; Heritage Russian
URL: https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2020.00020
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-2-f9k0kfyikn4w5
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4
Prerequisites of Third-Person Pronoun Use in Monolingual and Bilingual Children With Autism and Typical Language Development
Meir, Natalia; Novogrodsky, Rama. - : Frontiers Media S.A., 2019
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5
Morpho-Syntactic Abilities of Unbalanced Bilingual Children: A Closer Look at the Weaker Language
Meir, Natalia. - : Frontiers Media S.A., 2018
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6
Proceedings of the 41th Annual Boston University Conference on Language Development [held November 4-6, 2016, in Boston] 2. 2
In: 2 (2017), S. 495-508
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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7
On-line comprehension of Russian case cues in monolingual Russian and bilingual Russian-Dutch and Russian-Hebrew children
In: Proceedings of the 39th annual Boston University Conference on Language Development, Volume 2 (Boston, 2015), p. 266-278
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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8
Assessing multilingual children : disentangling bilingualism from language impairment
Armon-Lotem, Sharon; Jong, Jan de; Meir , Natalia. - Bristol [u.a.] : Multilingual Matters, 2015
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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9
Using parent report to assess early lexical production in children exposed to more than one language
Gatt, Daniela; O'Toole, Ciara; Haman, Ewa. - : Multilingual Matters, 2015
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