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Heritage languages and their speakers: Opportunities and challenges for linguistics

TLDR
The authors examine several important grammatical phenomena from the standpoint of their representation in heritage languages, including case, aspect, and other interface phenomena, and discuss how the questions raised by data from heritage speakers could fruitfully shed light on cur- rent debates about how language works and how it is acquired under different conditions.
Abstract
In this paper, we bring to the attention of the linguistic community re- cent research on heritage languages. Shifting linguistic attention from the model of a monolingual speaker to the model of a multilingual speaker is important for the advancement of our understanding of the language faculty. Native speaker competence is typically the result of normal first language acquisition in an envi- ronment where the native language is dominant in various contexts, and learners have extensive and continuous exposure to it and opportunities to use it. Heritage speakers present a different case: they are bilingual speakers of an ethnic or im- migrant minority language, whose first language often does not reach native-like attainment in adulthood. We propose a set of connections between heritage lan- guage studies and theory construction, underscoring the potential that this popu - lation offers for linguistic research. We examine several important grammatical phenomena from the standpoint of their representation in heritage languages, including case, aspect, and other interface phenomena. We discuss how the questions raised by data from heritage speakers could fruitfully shed light on cur - rent debates about how language works and how it is acquired under different conditions. We end with a consideration of the potential competing factors that shape a heritage language system in adulthood.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Processing of Prosody and Semantics in Sepedi and L2 English

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of semantic focus and prosody in processing by Sepedi L1/English L2 listeners was investigated in a phoneme-detection task and the results suggest that the L2 prosodic structure is exploited by Black South African English listeners even if this feature is not present in their L1.
Journal ArticleDOI

“how can we even talk about accents when it comes to preserving a language?”: attitudes towards partial linguistic competence

TL;DR: The authors analyze attitudes to a language by new speakers in Kalmyk-speaking communities and find that there are negative attitudes toward the accents of new speakers, as well as toward the linguistic competence of the younger generation in a family.
Journal ArticleDOI

Resilience and vulnerability of discourse-conditioned word order in heritage Spanish

TL;DR: The authors investigate the discourse-conditioned non-canonical word orders that mark information focus in Spanish and find that heritage speakers largely resemble baseline speakers, and interpret this convergence with reference to seven factors potentially affecting heritage language acquisition.

Agreement Asymmetries with Adjectives in Heritage Greek

TL;DR: This paper showed that adjectives characterize the literary language and heritage speakers lack familiarity with this register, which is viewed by other researchers as supporting theories that treat nominal concord as being different from subject-verb agreement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Use of the first-acquired language modulates pupil size in the processing of island constraint violations

TL;DR: This article used pupillometry to investigate pupillary responses to three syntactic island constructions in two groups of Spanish/English bilinguals: heritage speakers and late bilinguals, and two models were created and compared to one another: one with group (LB/HS) and the other with groups collapsed and current and historical use of Spanish as continuous variables.
References
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Book

The Minimalist Program

Noam Chomsky
TL;DR: This twentieth-anniversary edition reissues Noam Chomsky's classic work The Minimalist Program with a new preface by the author, which emphasizes that the minimalist approach developed in the book and in subsequent work "is a program, not a theory."
Book

Knowledge of Language: Its Nature, Origin, and Use

Noam Chomsky
TL;DR: The best available introduction to Chomsky's current ideas on syntax made accessible to the non-specialist can be found in this article, where Lightfoot, Newmeyer, and Moravcsik present an excellent contribution to the philosophy of language and philosophy of mind.
Book

Constructing a Language: A Usage-Based Theory of Language Acquisition

TL;DR: The authors argue that the essence of language is its symbolic dimension, which rests on the uniquely human ability to comprehend intention, and that children pick up these patterns in the buzz of words they hear around them.
Book

Variability in Early Communicative Development

TL;DR: Data from parent reports are used to describe the typical course and the extent of variability in major features of communicative development between 8 and 30 months of age, and unusually detailed information is offered on the course of development of individual lexical, gestural, and grammatical items and features.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cross-language speech perception: Evidence for perceptual reorganization during the first year of life

TL;DR: This article showed that infants can discriminate non-native speech contrasts without relevant experience, and that there is a decline in this ability during ontogeny, which is a function of specific language experience.