How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition? How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition?

This paper compares monolingual acquisition to the acquisition of two languages from infancy. Basis for the comparison is the acquisition literature. Specifically for bilingual acquisition, the paper relies on findings
 from studies on young bilingual children who together are acquiring 13 l...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Annick De Houwer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina 2008-04-01
Series:Ilha do Desterro
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/article/view/10203
_version_ 1811334723705765888
author Annick De Houwer
author_facet Annick De Houwer
author_sort Annick De Houwer
collection DOAJ
description This paper compares monolingual acquisition to the acquisition of two languages from infancy. Basis for the comparison is the acquisition literature. Specifically for bilingual acquisition, the paper relies on findings
 from studies on young bilingual children who together are acquiring 13 languages in 14 different combinations. The data available to date strongly suggest that in essence, bilingual and monolingual children go through the primary language development process in fundamentally similar ways.
 There are also striking similarities between bilingual and monolingual children for one particular language-in-acquisition. The acquisition process, then, appears to be very robust, and quite immune to the fact whether a
 child is growing up with two languages or just one. This paper compares monolingual acquisition to the acquisition of two languages from infancy. Basis for the comparison is the acquisition literature. Specifically for bilingual acquisition, the paper relies on findings
 from studies on young bilingual children who together are acquiring 13 languages in 14 different combinations. The data available to date strongly suggest that in essence, bilingual and monolingual children go through the primary language development process in fundamentally similar ways.
 There are also striking similarities between bilingual and monolingual children for one particular language-in-acquisition. The acquisition process, then, appears to be very robust, and quite immune to the fact whether a
 child is growing up with two languages or just one.
first_indexed 2024-04-13T17:12:30Z
format Article
id doaj.art-fe3e4081b6994f5aaee83367055f9d57
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 0101-4846
2175-8026
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-13T17:12:30Z
publishDate 2008-04-01
publisher Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina
record_format Article
series Ilha do Desterro
spelling doaj.art-fe3e4081b6994f5aaee83367055f9d572022-12-22T02:38:14ZengUniversidade Federal de Santa CatarinaIlha do Desterro0101-48462175-80262008-04-01043127148How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition? How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition?Annick De HouwerThis paper compares monolingual acquisition to the acquisition of two languages from infancy. Basis for the comparison is the acquisition literature. Specifically for bilingual acquisition, the paper relies on findings
 from studies on young bilingual children who together are acquiring 13 languages in 14 different combinations. The data available to date strongly suggest that in essence, bilingual and monolingual children go through the primary language development process in fundamentally similar ways.
 There are also striking similarities between bilingual and monolingual children for one particular language-in-acquisition. The acquisition process, then, appears to be very robust, and quite immune to the fact whether a
 child is growing up with two languages or just one. This paper compares monolingual acquisition to the acquisition of two languages from infancy. Basis for the comparison is the acquisition literature. Specifically for bilingual acquisition, the paper relies on findings
 from studies on young bilingual children who together are acquiring 13 languages in 14 different combinations. The data available to date strongly suggest that in essence, bilingual and monolingual children go through the primary language development process in fundamentally similar ways.
 There are also striking similarities between bilingual and monolingual children for one particular language-in-acquisition. The acquisition process, then, appears to be very robust, and quite immune to the fact whether a
 child is growing up with two languages or just one.http://www.periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/article/view/10203English LanguageEnglish
spellingShingle Annick De Houwer
How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition? How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition?
Ilha do Desterro
English Language
English
title How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition? How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition?
title_full How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition? How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition?
title_fullStr How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition? How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition?
title_full_unstemmed How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition? How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition?
title_short How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition? How different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition?
title_sort how different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition how different are monolingual and bilingual acquisition
topic English Language
English
url http://www.periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/article/view/10203
work_keys_str_mv AT annickdehouwer howdifferentaremonolingualandbilingualacquisitionhowdifferentaremonolingualandbilingualacquisition