This dissertation contributes to an ongoing debate on the types of linguistic features which can be acquired in a second language by looking at the multiple learning challenges related to the ergative case system (the appearance of –ne with the subject) in Hindi-Urdu by classroom learners. Some hypotheses in second language research hold that interpretable features (features which contribute semantic information) can be acquired in a second language, whereas uninterpretable features (features which express grammatical information) cannot be easily acquired, if ever. Additionally, hypotheses in second language processing hold that the second language learners are able to process semantic information but not grammatical information. This dissertation investigates at the acquisition process of second language learners of Hindi-Urdu acquiring the uninterpretable ergative case. In Hindi-Urdu, the subject of a sentence appears with the ergative case marker –ne, when the verb is transitive and in the perfective aspect. In my dissertation, I test the validity of the aforementioned hypotheses and investigate the acquisition and acquisitional process of ergative case in L2 Hindi-Urdu by L1 English speakers by analyzing data collected by using an acceptability/grammaticality judgement task, a self-paced reading task and a production task from Hindi-Urdu learners and native speakers.
Acquisition of ergative case in L2 Hindi-Urdu
Abstract
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Acquisition of ergative case in L2 Hindi-Urdu
- Creators
- Rajiv Ranjan - University of Iowa
- Contributors
- Paula Kempchinsky (Advisor)Alice Davison (Advisor)Elena Gavruseva (Committee Member)Thomas Farmer (Committee Member)Judith Liskin-Gasparro (Committee Member)Philip Lutgendorf (Committee Member)
- Resource Type
- Dissertation
- Degree Awarded
- Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Iowa
- Degree in
- Second Language Acquisition
- Date degree season
- Spring 2016
- DOI
- 10.17077/etd.fju48vz5
- Publisher
- University of Iowa
- Number of pages
- xvii, 276 pages
- Copyright
- Copyright 2016 Rajiv Ranjan
- Language
- English
- Description illustrations
- illustrations (some color)
- Description bibliographic
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 229-241).
- Public Abstract (ETD)
This dissertation contributes to an ongoing debate on the types of linguistic features which can be acquired in a second language by looking at the multiple learning challenges related to the ergative case system (the appearance of –ne with the subject) in Hindi-Urdu by classroom learners. Some hypotheses in second language research hold that interpretable features (features that contribute semantic information) can be acquired in a second language, whereas uninterpretable features (features that express grammatical information) cannot be easily acquired, if ever. Additionally, hypotheses in second language processing hold that second language learners are able to process semantic information but not grammatical information. This dissertation investigates the acquisition process of second language learners of Hindi-Urdu acquiring the uninterpretable ergative case. In Hindi-Urdu, the subject of a sentence appears with the ergative case marker –ne when the verb is transitive and in the perfective aspect. In my dissertation, I test the validity of the aforementioned hypotheses and investigate the acquisition and acquisitional process of ergative case in L2 Hindi-Urdu by L1 English speakers by analyzing data collected by using an acceptability/grammaticality judgment task, a self-paced reading task, and a production task from Hindi-Urdu learners and native speakers.
- Academic Unit
- Second Language Acquisition
- Record Identifier
- 9983776954302771