Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
933311 Journal of Pragmatics 2011 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

The acquisition of connectives (and, because, but) can be accounted for by the cumulative complexity approach – at least partially (Evers-Vermeul and Sanders, 2009, ). In this paper we extend this approach by distinguishing between several types of causal relations, such as Sweetser's (1990) content, epistemic and speech-act use of causal connectives. We used converging methodologies to investigate when children discover these three domains in the use of causal connectives. In two experiments, Dutch children aged 3;1–6;0 had to describe causally related events, argue with and instruct a hand puppet. These experiments revealed that even three-year-olds can produce causal connectives in all three domains. Our third study, a longitudinal corpus study among Dutch children aged 1;6–5;6, shows that children as young as 2;8 are able to produce causal connectives in the content and the speech act domain, but that the epistemic domain is acquired later. Furthermore, it appears that context plays a crucial role in the production of domain types. Our approach of using converging methodologies proves fruitful: corpus-based data show us children's earliest spontaneous use and enable us to track longitudinal developments; experiments enable us to control for context effects.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics