Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
936402 Lingua 2006 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper explores three universal tendencies in spoken language acquisition: consonant and vowel harmony, cluster reduction and systemic simplification, using a corpus of 1018 signs from a single child exposed to British Sign Language (BSL) from birth. Child signs were recorded from naturalistic deaf parent–deaf child interaction between the ages of 19–24 months. Child errors were analysed by handshape, movement and location segments, as well as the accurate production of prosodic features, using an autosegmental phonology approach. Unadult like forms at this age were observed with 41% of handshapes, 45% of movements and 25% of locations. There were 47% of signs produced with unadult like prosodic features. Analysis of the results concludes that early child signing broadly follows proposed universal tendencies in language acquisition.

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