Refine
Year of publication
- 2004 (492) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (172)
- Working Paper (71)
- Part of a Book (68)
- Preprint (48)
- Doctoral Thesis (43)
- Part of Periodical (34)
- Conference Proceeding (28)
- Report (13)
- Book (10)
- diplomthesis (2)
Language
- English (492) (remove)
Keywords
- Syntax (26)
- Generative Transformationsgrammatik (23)
- Wortstellung (19)
- Deutsch (16)
- Optimalitätstheorie (12)
- Phonologie (11)
- Deutschland (9)
- Englisch (8)
- Formale Semantik (8)
- Informationsstruktur (8)
Institute
- Physik (75)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (38)
- Center for Financial Studies (CFS) (28)
- Medizin (27)
- Extern (24)
- Biochemie und Chemie (23)
- Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies (FIAS) (20)
- Biowissenschaften (12)
- Informatik (12)
- Mathematik (9)
The papers of this 33th volume of the ZAS Papers in Linguistics present intermediate results of the ZAS-project on language acquisition. Currently we deal with the question of which functions children assign to the first grammatical forms they use productively. The goal is to identify grammatical features comprising the child's early grammar. This issue is investigated within the analyses of longitudinal data (cf. the papers of Gagarina/Bittner, Gagarina, Kühnast/Popova/Popov, Bewer) as well as within experimental research (see the papers of Bittner, Kühnast/Popova/Popov). The main topic of this volume is the acquisition of definite articles and verbal aspect.
Bewer – who has worked as a student assistant in the project for a long time and wrote her MA-thesis on the topic of the project – investigates children's acquisition of gender features in German. Kühnast/Popova/Popov discuss the correlations between the acquisition of definite articles and verbal aspect in Bulgarian. Bittner presents results of an experimental study on definite article perception in adult German. Gagarina traces the emergence of aspectual oppositions in Russian and examines the validity of the 'aspect before tense' hypothesis for L1-speaking children. Additionally, the paper of Gagarina/Bittner deals with the interrelation between the acquisition of finiteness and verb arguments in Russian and German.
After this issue you will have a new editor at the helm: Dr Volker Framenau. As you have been reading in the newsletters Volker has a background in both taxonomy and ecology. A network across both disciplines should help keep us well informed of the latest news and research within the region. Volker is very enthusiastic about the society and I encourage members to keep supporting the newsletter by sending him your articles. Volker has been helping me develop the webpage so that will continue to evolve.