In:The Acquisition of Relative Clauses: Processing, typology and function
Edited by Evan Kidd
[Trends in Language Acquisition Research 8] 2011
► pp. 61–80
Chapter 3. Learning from social interaction
The form and function of relative clauses in discourse and experimental studies with children
Published online: 23 November 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/tilar.8.05bra
https://doi.org/10.1075/tilar.8.05bra
According to usage-based and constructivist approaches to language development, linguistic categories and structures have semantic content and a communicative function. Relative clauses (RCs) serve a variety of functions in spoken discourse. Depending on their function, RCs occur in different discourse and linguistic contexts and are marked by different formal, semantic, and lexical features. This has largely been ignored in studies that investigated children’s processing of these complex structures. I will summarize cross-linguistic corpus studies that analyzed the form and function of RC constructions in children’s and adults’ speech. Furthermore, I will summarize findings from recent cross-linguistic experiments that suggest that children’s processing of RC constructions is constrained by the form and function of RCs as they are used in social interactions as well as by the form and function of other related, more frequent constructions. Most of the corpus and experimental data come from children learning English, German, Japanese, or Cantonese because there are comparable studies, but I will also indicate when there is data from other languages.
Cited by (6)
Cited by six other publications
Ng, Chi Wui
2025. A revisit of three hypotheses about second language development of English relative clauses. Pedagogical Linguistics 6:1 ► pp. 78 ff.
Hao, Yuxin, Xuan Xu, Xuelin Wang, Yanni Lin & Haitao Liu
Jach, Daniel
Malkin, Louise, Kirsten Abbot-Smith & David Williams
ABBOT-SMITH, KIRSTEN, ERIKA NURMSOO, REBECCA CROLL, HEATHER FERGUSON & MICHAEL FORRESTER
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 6 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
