Constructing a Language: A Usage-Based Theory of Language Acquisition

Constructing a Language: A Usage-Based Theory of Language Acquisition

by Michael Tomasello
Constructing a Language: A Usage-Based Theory of Language Acquisition
Constructing a Language: A Usage-Based Theory of Language Acquisition

Constructing a Language: A Usage-Based Theory of Language Acquisition

by Michael Tomasello

eBook

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Overview

In this groundbreaking book,Michael Tomasello presents a comprehensive usage-based theory of language acquisition. Drawing together a vast body of empirical research in cognitive science, linguistics, and developmental psychology, Tomasello demonstrates that we don’t need a self-contained “language instinct” to explain how children learn language. Their linguistic ability is interwoven with other cognitive abilities. Tomasello argues that the essence of language is its symbolic dimension, which rests on the uniquely human ability to comprehend intention. Grammar emerges as the speakers of a language create linguistic constructions out of recurring sequences of symbols; children pick up these patterns in the buzz of words they hear around them. All theories of language acquisition assume these fundamental skills of intention-reading and pattern-finding. Some formal linguistic theories posit a second set of acquisition processes to connect somehow with an innate universal grammar. But these extra processes, Tomasello argues, are completely unnecessary—important to save a theory but not to explain the phenomenon. For all its empirical weaknesses, Chomskian generative grammar has ruled the linguistic world for forty years. Constructing a Language offers a compellingly argued, psychologically sound new vision for the study of language acquisition

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674044395
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 03/31/2005
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 408
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Michael Tomasello is Co-Director of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany. He is the author of First Verbs and the coauthor of Primate Cognition.

Table of Contents

1 Usage-Based Linguistics 2 Origins of Language 2.1. Phylogenetic Origins 9 2.2. Ontogenetic Origins 19 2.3. Children's First Utterances 31 2.4. Summary 40 3 Words 3.1. Early Words and their Uses 44 3.2. Processes of Word Learning 58 3.3. Theories of Word Learning 8s 3.4. Summary 91 4 Early Syntactic Constructions 4.1. The Nature of Constructions 98 4.2. Early Constructional Islands 113 4.3. Marking Syntactic Roles 126 4.4. Summary 140 5 Abstract Syntactic Constructions 5.1. Abstract Constructions 146 5.2. Constructing Constructions 161 5.3. Constraining Constructions 175 5.4. Theories of Syntactic Development 181 5.5. Summary 193 6 Nominal and Clausal Constructions 6.1. Reference and Nominals 199 6.2. Predication and Clauses 213 6.3. Learning Morphology 232 6.4. Summary 241 7 Complex Constructions and Discourse 7.1. Complex Constructions 244 7.2. Conversation and Narrative 266 7.3. Summary 279 8 Biological, Cultural, and Ontogenetic Processes 8.1. Dual Inheritance 283 8.2. Psycholinguistic Processes of Acquisition 295 8.3. Psycholinguistic Processes of Production 305 8.4. The Development of Linguistic Representations 314 8.5. Summary 320 9 Toward a Psychology of Language Acquisition References 331 Acknowledgments 373 Index 375

What People are Saying About This

Elizabeth Bates

Constructing a Language is the best book on language development since Roger Brown's A First Language. Tomasello has taken full advantage of the research that has been done in the thirty years since Brown's landmark book, to give us a full account of language acquisition, from the first signs of intentional communication in prespeech through the most complex syntactic constructions children produce. The book rebuilds bridges between child language and linguistic theory -- but in place of generative grammar, Tomasello ties the study of emergent language to a usage-based approach derived from cognitive and functional linguistics. He is particularly persuasive in showing how it solves the essential problem of how children "get from here to there," as they move by analogy from item-based phrases and word islands to richer constructions. Tomasello's book presents a comprehensive and well-articulated theory of the language-learning process that is more complete and richer in its heuristic value than any other attempt of its kind. It will be difficult to refute and impossible to ignore.
Elizabeth Bates, University of California at San Diego

Certain to be a landmark in the language sciences, this book persuasively argues that all of our fundamental knowledge of language can be "learned" on the basis of what we hear, with recourse only to general basic cognitive abilities: intention reading and pattern-finding. No hard-wired "language instinct" is required. Tomasello's synthesis of linguistics and psychology will permanently change the debates about the developmental origins of language.

Adele Goldberg

Certain to be a landmark in the language sciences, this book persuasively argues that all of our fundamental knowledge of language can be "learned" on the basis of what we hear, with recourse only to general basic cognitive abilities: intention reading and pattern-finding. No hard-wired "language instinct" is required. Tomasello's synthesis of linguistics and psychology will permanently change the debates about the developmental origins of language.
Adele Goldberg, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

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