Bloom P
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge 02139.
J Child Lang. 1990 Jun;17(2):343-55. doi: 10.1017/s0305000900013805.
This paper presents a study of young children's understanding of a constraint on English word order, which is that pronouns and proper names cannot be modified by prenominal adjectives. For adults, this is a syntactic constraint: adjectives can only precede nouns, and pronouns and proper names are lexical Noun Phrases (NPs). In two analyses, the spontaneous speech of 14 one- and two-year-old children was studied. These analyses show that even in children's very first word combinations, they almost never say things like big Fred or big he. Some nonsyntactic theories of this phenomenon are discussed and found to have serious descriptive problems, supporting the claim that children understand knowledge of word order through rules that order abstract linguistic categories. A theory is proposed as to how children could use semantic information to draw the noun/NP distinction and to acquire this restriction on English word order.
本文呈现了一项关于幼儿对英语词序限制理解的研究,该限制是代词和专有名词不能被前置形容词修饰。对成年人来说,这是一种句法限制:形容词只能位于名词之前,而代词和专有名词是词汇性名词短语(NP)。在两项分析中,研究了14名一岁和两岁儿童的自发言语。这些分析表明,即使在儿童最初的单词组合中,他们几乎从不说像“大弗雷德”或“大他”这样的话。本文讨论了关于这一现象的一些非句法理论,并发现它们存在严重的描述性问题,这支持了儿童通过对抽象语言范畴进行排序的规则来理解词序知识这一观点。本文提出了一种理论,阐述儿童如何利用语义信息来区分名词/名词短语,并习得对英语词序的这种限制。