In:Lost in Transmission: The role of attrition and input in heritage language development
Edited by Bernhard Brehmer and Jeanine Treffers-Daller
[Studies in Bilingualism 59] 2020
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 29 May 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/sibil.59.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/sibil.59.toc
Table of contents
AcknowledgementsVII
Introduction: Two sides of one coin? The relevance of first language attrition for the acquisition of heritage languages1
Bernhard Brehmer
Jeanine Treffers-Daller
Definiteness in Wenzhounese Chinese in the Netherlands and in China: Evidence for generational change in two locations15
Suzanne Aalberse
Sible Andringa
Martina Faber
Phine Lippe
Effects of first language attrition on heritage language input and ultimate attainment: Two generations of Turkish immigrants in the UK33
Tuğba Karayayla
Not in the mood: Frequency effects in heritage speakers’ subjunctive knowledge71
David Giancaspro
Word order variation in heritage languages: Subject shift and object shift in Norwegian99
Merete Anderssen
Marit Westergaard
Language contact: Gender agreement in Spanish L2 learners and heritage speakers125
Jessica Diebowski
How do parental input and socio-economic status account for differences within and between the cohorts?151
Elke Montanari
Roman Abel
Lilia Tschudinovski
Barbara Graßer
Heritage and non-heritage bilinguals: The role of biliteracy and bilingual education171
Maria Andreou
Ifigenia Dosi
Despina Papadopoulou
Ianthi Maria Tsimpli
High sensitivity to conceptual cues in Turkish heritage speakers with dominant German L2: Comparing semantics-morphosyntax and pragmatics-morphosyntax interfaces197
Elif Krause
The Frequency Code and gendered attrition and acquisition in the German-English heritage language community in Vancouver,
Canada229
Esther de Leeuw
Does extensive L2 exposure trigger L1 attrition of perfective and durative aspect marking in Mandarin Chinese?255
Shi Zhang
Index271
