Examining Main Clause Similarity and Frequency Effects in the Production of Tagalog Relative Clauses

This study investigates two possible factors in the well-known subject preference in the acquisition and processing of relative clauses (RCs): (i) an effect of similarity between declarative and relative clauses and (ii) an effect of frequency of certain RC types. Two production experiments were con...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tanaka, Nozomi, Bondoc, Ivan Paul, Deen, Kamil
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Hawaii Press 2022-11-01
Series:Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10524/52506
Description
Summary:This study investigates two possible factors in the well-known subject preference in the acquisition and processing of relative clauses (RCs): (i) an effect of similarity between declarative and relative clauses and (ii) an effect of frequency of certain RC types. Two production experiments were conducted with adult and child speakers of Tagalog, a verb-initial language with a Philippine-type voice system. One experiment elicited declarative clauses and the other elicited relative clauses; both had two animacy conditions: animate-animate (animate agent and patient) and animate-inanimate (animate agent, inanimate patient). Experiment 1’s results show a preference for patient voice in the animate-animate condition only. Experiment 2’s results show a preference for the relativization of the agent in the animate-inanimate condition only. We suggest that the interplay of a patient voice preference in Tagalog with a general preference for the relativization of agents – the source of which remains undetermined – may explain these results.
ISSN:1836-6821