Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10461209 Lingua 2011 25 Pages PDF
Abstract
This paper investigates how exhaustivity in single and multiple wh-questions is acquired in German-speaking children with SLI. Comparing semantic and pragmatic accounts of exhaustivity, obligatory exhaustivity of multiple wh-questions is argued to be problematic for pragmatic approaches. A unified semantic approach is suggested that relates exhaustivity to an inherent property of the question meaning. Two question-with-picture experiments explored the comprehension of four wh-question types (single wh-questions with and without the quantifying question particle alles, paired and conjoined wh-questions) in 5-year-old children. Twenty children with SLI, 20 typically developing (TD) children, and 20 adults participated in Experiment 1, and 17 TD children in Experiment 2. The results indicate that 5-year-old TD children have acquired exhaustivity in single and paired wh-questions. The children with SLI mastered wh-alles-questions, but not the other wh-question types. For single wh-questions, the most frequent errors were singleton answers, and for paired and conjoined wh-questions exhaustive lists of subjects or objects; plural responses were not found. Within individual children, single wh-questions were acquired before paired wh-questions. These findings suggest that a unified theory for both single and paired wh-questions is desirable, one which attributes exhaustivity to universally exhausting the question domain - a property that SLI children do not possess. These results add to recent research indicating that children with SLI may have deficits in semantics.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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