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Crosslinguistic evidence for the diminutive advantage: gender agreement in Russian and Serbian children

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2007

NADA šEVA
Affiliation:
University of Stirling, and Laboratory of Experimental Psychology, University of Belgrade
VERA KEMPE
Affiliation:
University of Stirling
PATRICIA J. BROOKS
Affiliation:
College of Staten Island and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York
NATALIJA MIRONOVA
Affiliation:
Moscow State University
ANGELINA PERSHUKOVA
Affiliation:
Moscow State University
OLGA FEDOROVA
Affiliation:
Moscow State University

Abstract

Our previous research showed that Russian children commit fewer gender-agreement errors with diminutive nouns than with their simplex counterparts. Experiment 1 replicates this finding with Russian children (N=24, mean 3;7, range 2;10–4;6). Gender agreement was recorded from adjective usage as children described animal pictures given just their names, varying in derivational status (diminutive/simplex), novelty, and gender. Experiment 2 extends the gender-agreement elicitation methodology developed for Russian to Serbian, a language with similar morphosyntactic structure but considerably fewer diminutives in child-directed speech. Serbian children (N=22, mean age 3;8, range 3;0–4;1), exhibited an advantage for diminutive nouns of almost the same magnitude as the Russian children. The fact that the diminutive advantage was found in a language with a low frequency of diminutives in the input suggests that morphophonological homogeneity of word clusters and membership in dense neighbourhoods are important factors that contribute to the reduction of inflectional errors during language development.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2007 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

The Russian experiment was sponsored by NATO Collaborative Linkage Grant LST.CLG 978585 to Drs. Kempe, Mironova and Brooks. Portions of this work were presented at the Biennial conference of the Society for Research in Child Development, April 2005 and X International Congress for the Study of Child Language, July 2005.