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Diminutivization supports gender acquisition in Russian children

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2003

VERA KEMPE
Affiliation:
University of Stirling
PATRICIA J. BROOKS
Affiliation:
The College of Staten Island and the Graduate School of the City University of New York
NATALIJA MIRONOVA
Affiliation:
Moscow State University
OLGA FEDOROVA
Affiliation:
Moscow State University

Abstract

Gender agreement elicitation was used with Russian children to examine how diminutives common in Russian child-directed speech affect gender learning. Forty-six children (2;9–4;8) were shown pictures of familiar and of novel animals and asked to describe them after hearing their names, which all contained regular morphophonological cues to masculine or feminine gender. Half were presented as simplex (e.g. jozh ‘porcupine’) and half as diminutive forms (e.g. jozhik ‘porcupine-DIM’). Children produced fewer agreement errors for diminutive than for simplex nouns, indicating that the regularizing features of diminutives enhance gender categorization. The study demonstrates how features of child-directed speech can facilitate language learning.

Type
Note
Copyright
2003 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

This study was supported by NATO collaborative linkage grant #975293 awarded to Patricia Brooks, Olga Fedorova, and Vera Kempe. We would like to thank the children, parents, and staff at day care centres #250, 735, 859, and 2023 of the city of Moscow for their participation and support of the study.