Volume 21, Issue 2

Abstract

Abstract

In this paper, we argue that ascending verb cluster orders (1-2 and 1-2-3, e.g. ‘must eat’ and ‘must have eaten’) are not only the default verb cluster orders in Standard Dutch as spoken in the Netherlands, but also play a crucial role in the acquisition of verb clusters. We administered a series of three sentence repetition tasks (SRTs) to a total of 120 children (2;8–5;6), and found that children, in contrast to what previous literature might predict, are much more likely to produce 1-2 orders than 2-1 orders. We propose an acquisition pathway in which we assume an (V-final) and a before children completely fine-tune their preferences toward adult-like behavior. We further argue that this pathway first applies to bipartite modal-infinitive clusters but is quickly expanded to include all cluster types. We believe our proposal has three advantages: it answers an important learnability question, explains the differences attested between the way children of different ages handle verb clusters, and strongly suggests that verb clusters follow one general rule, rather than several separate construction-specific ones.

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/content/journals/10.5117/NEDTAA2016.2.MEYE
2016-09-01
2024-03-29
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http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/journals/10.5117/NEDTAA2016.2.MEYE
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Keyword(s): Dutch; L1 acquisition; verb clusters; verb raising

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