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Chapter 7 - Children's new sign creations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2012

Diane Lillo-Martin
Affiliation:
University of Connecticut
Michael Strong
Affiliation:
University of California, San Francisco
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Summary

Editor's introduction

Lillo-Martin, for several years a researcher in Ursula Bellugi's laboratory at the Salk Institute, is interested in lexical innovations in ASL. Her study reported in this chapter examines the responses of groups of deaf children of deaf parents (whose native language is ASL) and deaf adults to two kinds of intriguing tests designed to elicit sign creations for new objects, persons, or machines. She analyzes the responses from her subjects in terms of a set of principles established by researchers working with English- and Hebrew-speaking children responding to similar tests, and finds that deaf children go through several stages in their acquisition of appropriated use of word-formation devices, differing in some important ways from those experienced by hearing children. For the sign language users, certain of the tasks often elicited responses that were non-word-based (in contrast to the responses from hearing subjects). This suggests that the visual modality can have a major effect on the structure and acquisition of visual languages.

One enduring aspect of language is change. Pronunciations change; structures change; and perhaps most rapidly of all, the lexicon changes. As new concepts enter the society in which a language is spoken and old ones die away or take on new importance, the vocabulary of a language grows and shifts. Speakers of every language know this (at least implicitly), and they all know what kinds of devices are used in their language to create new words and the relative productivity of each of these devices under a variety of circumstances.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1988

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