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Singular or plural? Children's knowledge of the factors that determine the appropriate form of count nouns

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2002

KRAG S. FERENZ
Affiliation:
Dartmouth College
SANDEEP PRASADA
Affiliation:
Dartmouth College

Abstract

Two experiments investigated the factors that govern children's use of singular and plural forms of count nouns. Experiment 1 used an elicited production task to investigate whether children use referential and/or syntactic information to determine the form of the count nouns when the two sources of information conflict (e.g. each x, one of the xs), as well as when the linguistic context does not provide any constraint on the form of the noun, but the referential context does (e.g. the dog(s)). 48 children, aged 1;9 to 5;6, participated in Experiment 1. The results suggest that even the youngest children can use referential information when relevant, and can ignore referential information when necessary. Children did, however, show a tendency to make errors with the quantifier each in non-partitive contexts, and a developmental trend was found in the use and avoidance of each in non-partitive contexts. Experiment 2, an act out task, provided a second test of the role of referential information in children's use of singular and plural forms. Experiment 2 also investigated children's appreciation of the semantic distinction between each and all. 48 children, aged 1;8 to 5;6, participated in Experiment 2. A weak sensitivity to the semantic distinction between the two quantifiers as well as the syntactic context in which they were used was found. The results of the two experiments suggest that, from the beginning, children approach the task of learning when to use singular and plural forms of count nouns on the basis of morpho-syntactic, semantic, and referential properties of utterances, rather than initially using only one of these types of information.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2002 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

We thank the parents, teachers, and children at the Dartmouth Child Care Center and the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical-Center-Day Care Center in Hanover, New Hampshire, and also The Day Care Center Inc. in Norwich, Vermont. This research was supported in part by National Science Foundation grant SBR-9618712.