
Epistemological issue with keynote article “Prosodic effects on L2 grammars”
[Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism, 9:6] 2019. iv, 132 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 3 December 2019
Published online on 3 December 2019
© John Benjamins Publishing Company
Table of Contents
- Prosodic effects on L2 grammarsHeather Goad & Lydia White | pp. 769–808
- Types of evidence and the Prosodic Transfer HypothesisJohn Archibald | pp. 809–815
- The Prosodic Transfer Hypothesis: Possible application to Spanish cliticsJoyce Bruhn de Garavito | pp. 816–821
- Plotting individual learning trajectories in the acquisition of L2 prosodic constraintsJennifer Cabrelli | pp. 822–826
- Prosodic effects on L2 grammars: From competence constraints to a learning research agendaSusanne E. Carroll | pp. 827–832
- ‘Minimal adaptation’ and the edges of prosodic domainsNicole Dehé | pp. 833–837
- Phonology constrains morphology differently in developing L1, cL2, and L2 GrammarsJanet Grijzenhout | pp. 838–842
- Prosodic transfer and its relation to hypotheses of morphological developmentRoger Hawkins | pp. 843–848
- Transfer cost and the developmental path to target object clitic prosodyJulia Herschensohn & Randall Gess | pp. 849–853
- Better together: The promise of the PTH as a complementary hypothesisTania Leal & Jeffrey Renaud | pp. 854–861
- Prosodic transfer in the receptive modality: Recognizing morphology within L2 prosodyJohn Matthews | pp. 862–866
- Possible extensions of the Prosodic Transfer HypothesisAntje Muntendam | pp. 867–871
- The Prosodic Transfer Hypothesis in the grammar and its treatment of cliticsKuniya Nasukawa | pp. 872–877
- The scope of the Prosodic Transfer HypothesisÖner Özçelik | pp. 878–882
- Evidence for syntactic feature transfer between two languagesNiels O. Schiller | pp. 883–887
- What do prosodic accounts add to the research on L2 articles?Danijela Trenkic | pp. 888–894
- Reply to commentariesHeather Goad & Lydia White | pp. 895–900
Epistemological paper
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