The present study examines the processing of Spanish future tense morphology incidentally
while reading in a second language. Previous L1 and L2 reading research has demonstrated that
readers can acquire new vocabulary as a result of reading, but can they also acquire formal
properties of the second language grammatical system? The participants in the present study had
no previous knowledge of future tense morphology such that, as they read the passage used in the
study, they encountered the target form for the first time, which is an accented á on the end of an infinitive—for example, dependerá “he, she, or it will depend.” Several variables were manipulated: (a) the frequency with which the target form appeared in the input passages (6, 10, or 16 exposures); (b) the
learner-readers' orientation to the task (neutral, meaning oriented, or form oriented); and
(c) cues to meaning (the presence or absence of future-oriented adverbials). The effects of these
variables were measured on both comprehension and input processing immediately after reading,
2 weeks later, and 1 month later. Comprehension was measured with a free-written recall and a
multiple-choice comprehension test. Input processing was measured with a multiple-choice form
recognition test and a modified cloze-form production test. The results indicate that all three
variables have some effect on comprehension and input processing.