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Showing all 5 results
Hawkins, Roger; Hattori, Hajime – Second Language Research, 2006
In recent work by Tsimpli (2003) and Tsimpli and Dimitrakopoulou (to appear) an explicit claim is made about the nature of end-state grammars in older second language (L2) learners: uninterpretable syntactic features that have not been selected during first language (L1) acquisition will not be available for L2 grammar construction. Interpretable…
Descriptors: Native Speakers, Questioning Techniques, Japanese, Grammar
Peer reviewedHawkins, Roger – Second Language Research, 2001
Evidence that native language acquisition is possible because children are born with an innate language faculty--universal grammar (UG)--is considerable. In second language acquisition by older learners, this notion is less clear. Discusses the poverty of stimulus phenomena (POS) in relation to this, and argues that while POS phenomena are…
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Acquisition, Language Research, Language Universals
Peer reviewedHawkins, Roger; Yet-hung Chan, Cecilia – Second Language Research, 1997
Tested whether the predictions of a particular syntactically based theory about partial availability of universal grammar in post-critical-period second-language acquisition can provide insight into the acquisition of English restrictive relative clauses. (48 references) (Author/CK)
Descriptors: College Students, Elementary School Students, Elementary Secondary Education, English (Second Language)
Peer reviewedHawkins, Roger; And Others – Second Language Research, 1993
A detailed study of the developing intuitions of English-speaking adult learners of second-language French was conducted. One finding, that English-speaking learners of French can use nonparametrized properties of Universal Grammar to handle surface syntactic English-French differences, supports an emerging view about the role of parametrized…
Descriptors: English, Foreign Countries, French, Grammar
Peer reviewedHawkins, Roger – Second Language Research, 1989
Examination of how French second language learners construct rules for French relativiser morphology found that learners did not make use of a theory of markedness like the accessibility hierarchy for relativization, but rather appeared to construct rules on the basis of the linear ordering of the constituents of restrictive relative clauses in…
Descriptors: Diacritical Marking, French, Higher Education, Language Patterns

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