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Variation in Second and Heritage Languages: Crosslinguistic perspectives [Kietas viršelis]

Edited by (Michigan State University), Edited by (University of Kentucky), Edited by (University of California, Davis)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 365 pages, weight: 830 g
  • Serija: Studies in Language Variation 28
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-Jul-2022
  • Leidėjas: John Benjamins Publishing Co
  • ISBN-10: 9027211140
  • ISBN-13: 9789027211149
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 365 pages, weight: 830 g
  • Serija: Studies in Language Variation 28
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-Jul-2022
  • Leidėjas: John Benjamins Publishing Co
  • ISBN-10: 9027211140
  • ISBN-13: 9789027211149
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
"Variationist work in Second Language Acquisition (SLA) began in the mid 1970s and steadily progressed during the 1980s. Much of it was reviewed along with newer approaches in Bayley and Preston 1996 (B&P), heavily devoted to VARBRUL analyses that exposed the variability in developing interlanguages and placed variationist work within the canon of SLA. This new volume features three developing trends. First, it widens the scope of L1s of learners (from 6 in B&P to 8) and L2 targets (2 in B&P to 7) and ineach case has brought more careful demographic and variable considerations to bear, including heritage languages and study abroad. Second, it modernizes statistics by moving from VARBRUL to the more widely used log-odds probabilities that allow more detailed consideration of variables and their influences. Finally, it deepens consideration of variable sociolinguistic meaning in learner behaviors, a dominating feature of 3rd Wave variationist work"--

Variationist work in Second Language Acquisition (SLA) began in the mid 1970s and steadily progressed during the 1980s. Much of it was reviewed along with newer approaches in Bayley and Preston 1996 (B&P), heavily devoted to VARBRUL analyses that exposed the variability in developing interlanguages and placed variationist work within the canon of SLA. This new volume features three developing trends. First, it widens the scope of L1s of learners (from 6 in B&P to 8) and L2 targets (2 in B&P to 7) and in each case has brought more careful demographic and variable considerations to bear, including heritage languages and study abroad. Second, it modernizes statistics by moving from VARBRUL to the more widely used log-odds probabilities that allow more detailed consideration of variables and their influences. Finally, it deepens consideration of variable sociolinguistic meaning in learner behaviors, a dominating feature of 3rd Wave variationist work.

Recenzijos

This volume contributes to filling a traditional gap in second language acquisition (SLA) and variationist studies, as it aims to answer WHY certain groups produce some linguistic variants at a higher rate than others -- Ąlvaro Calero-Pons, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, in Language in Society 52 (2023)

List of tables
ix
List of figures
xiii
Acknowledgements xv
Editors and contributors xvii
Chapter 1 Variation and second language acquisition: Recent developments and future directions
1(14)
Dennis R. Preston
Robert Bayley
Chelsea Escalante
Chapter 2 An investigation of the use of the multifunctional particle -le by second language learners of Mandarin Chinese
15(28)
Xiaoshi Li
Robert Bayley
Xinye Zhang
Yaqiong Cui
Chapter 3 Production and evaluation of sociolinguistic variation in Mandarin Chinese among children in Singapore
43(28)
Rebecca Lurie Starr
Chapter 4 Cross-linguistic influence in the acquisition of l3 variation: A comparison of speech and writing
71(26)
Mihi Park
Chapter 5 What can Cantonese heritage speakers tell us about age of acquisition, linguistic dominance, and sociophonetic variation?
97(30)
Holman Tse
Chapter 6 Spanish rhotic variation and development in uninstructed immersion
127(32)
Chelsea Escalante
Robyn Wright
Chapter 7 Linguistic variation and second language Spanish: A study of progressive and habitual marking by English-speaking learners
159(40)
Kimberly L. Geeslin
Stephen Fafulas
Chapter 8 Acquiring sociolinguistic competence during study abroad: U.S. students in Buenos Aires
199(24)
Rebecca Pozzi
Chapter 9 Variation in choice of prepositions with place names on the French L1-L2 continuum in Ontario, Canada
223(30)
Katherine Rehner
Raymond Mougeon
Francoise Mougeon
Chapter 10 Variation, identity and language attitudes: Polish migrants in France
253(26)
Vera Regan
Chapter 11 Sociostylistic variation in L2 French: What schwa deletion patterns reveal about language acquisition during study abroad
279(32)
Kristen Kennedy Terry
Chapter 12 Differential object marking in heritage and homeland Italian
311(26)
Margherita Di Salvo
Naomi Nagy
Chapter 13 On (not) acquiring a sociolinguistic stereotype: A variationist account of L2-Catalan lateral production by L1-Spanish bilinguals
337(22)
Justin Davidson
Author Index 359(4)
Subject Index 363