Article published In: Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism
Vol. 8:2 (2018) ► pp.163–192
Acquisition of scalar implicatures
Evidence from adult Japanese L2 learners of English
Published online: 26 February 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/lab.18010.sna
https://doi.org/10.1075/lab.18010.sna
Abstract
Our study investigates the second language (L2) acquisition of scalar implicatures some and all.
We set out to answer two research questions based on three theoretical accounts, the lexical, pragmatic and syntactic accounts. In
an experiment we include English and Japanese native speakers, and intermediate and advanced Japanese L2 learners of English. We
used quantifiers some and all in ‘Yes/No’ questions in a context with sets of toy fruits, where
pragmatic answers are expected, e.g., a ‘No’ response to the question ‘Are some of the strawberries in the red
circle?’ (when a set of 14/14 strawberries are placed inside a red circle). Our individual results indicate that L2
learners are generally more pragmatic in their responses than native English speakers. But, there are neither significant
differences between groups nor significant differences between L2 proficiency levels. We consider the implications of our findings
for the acquisition of L2 semantics and pragmatics.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Theoretical accounts of scalar implicatures
- 2.1The (Relevance Theory) pragmatic account of SIs
- 2.2The lexical account of SIs
- 2.3The syntactic account of SIs
- 3.First language acquisition of SIs
- 4.Second language acquisition of SIs
- 5.Japanese quantifiers
- 6.The present study
- 6.1Participants, materials and procedure
- 6.2Research questions
- 6.3Predictions
- The English native speaker group
- The Japanese native speaker group
- The Japanese L2 learners
- 6.4Group and individual results
- 7.Discussion
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
References
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