Distinguishing between obligatory and optional grammatical categories in ‘thinking for speaking’: The use of the ‘aan het construction’ by six-year-old Flemish children
Saartje Ghillebaert
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/110982
Description
Title
Distinguishing between obligatory and optional grammatical categories in ‘thinking for speaking’: The use of the ‘aan het construction’ by six-year-old Flemish children
Author(s)
Saartje Ghillebaert
Issue Date
2021
Keyword(s)
linguistics
language
grammar
linguistic relativity
Flemish
Abstract
This paper explores whether the influence of a grammatically
encoded category depends on being obligatory or nonobligatory. This paper tests Slobin’s approach to linguistic
relativity. According to Slobin (1996; 2003; 2008), the
presence of a grammatically encoded category directs the focus
of speakers in the ‘thinking for speaking’ process. Slobin
adduces evidence for this claim based on experiments with
children in which he focused on the expression of the
progressive aspect in various languages, e.g. the present and
past continuous in English (is/was running), in comparison with
languages that lack such a category. However, Slobin fails to
distinguish between obligatory and optional categories. Though
both are encoded form-meaning pairings in a language’s
grammar (cf. Levinson 2000, Belligh & Willems 2021), only
the former must be used in speech in specific contexts. The
present article focuses on this distinction and tests Slobin’s
account by examining the influence of a grammatical category,
such as the ‘aan het construction’ in Dutch, which encodes
progressive aspect even though it is non-obligatory in speech.
Our findings suggests that Slobin’s thesis should be adjusted:
Categories that are encoded and obligatory are generally
expressed while categories which are encoded and optional are
generally much more ignored. Speakers attend to encoded
grammatical categories that are non-obligatory only when the
speakers’ attention is explicitly directed to certain aspects of an
event.
Publisher
Studies in the Linguistic Sciences: Illinois Working Papers
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