The syntax-semantics interface in a child's path: A study of 3- to 11-year-olds' elicited production of Mandarin recursive relative clauses
Caimei Yang, Qihang Yang, Xingzhi Su, Chenxi Fu, Xiaoyi Wang, Ziman, Zhuang, Zaijiang Man

TL;DR
This study investigates how children aged 3 to 11 acquire Mandarin recursive relative clauses, revealing a two-stage development path influenced by semantic conditions and syntactic complexity.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence for a two-stage development model of syntax-semantics interface in child language acquisition of Mandarin RRCs.
Findings
Children acquire simpler RRCs two years earlier under irreversible semantics.
A two-stage development path aligns with the syntax-semantic interface principle.
Children's production of complex RRCs improves with semantic and syntactic development.
Abstract
There have been apparently conflicting claims over the syntax-semantics relationship in child acquisition. However, few of them have assessed the child's path toward the acquisition of recursive relative clauses (RRCs). The authors of the current paper did experiments to investigate 3- to 11-year-olds' most-structured elicited production of eight Mandarin RRCs in a 4 (syntactic types)*2 (semantic conditions) design. The four syntactic types were RRCs with a subject-gapped RC embedded in an object-gapped RC (SORRCs), RRCs with an object-gapped RC embedded in another object-gapped RC (OORRCs), RRCs with an object-gapped RC embedded in a subject-gapped RC (OSRRCs), and RRCs with a subject-gapped RC embedded in another subject-gapped RC (SSRRCs). Each syntactic type was put in two conditions differing in internal semantics: irreversible internal semantics (IIS) and reversible internal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLanguage Development and Disorders · Syntax, Semantics, Linguistic Variation
