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THE SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION OF SPANISH GENDER AGREEMENT: THE EFFECTS OF LINGUISTIC VARIABLES ON ACCURACY. Irma Alarcón

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 April 2008

Eve Zyzik
Affiliation:
Michigan State University

Extract

THE SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION OF SPANISH GENDER AGREEMENT: THE EFFECTS OF LINGUISTIC VARIABLES ON ACCURACY.Irma Alarcón. Munich: Lincom Europa, 2006. Pp. vi + 130. $52.00 paper.

This volume, a published dissertation, presents an empirical investigation into Spanish gender agreement among second language (L2) learners whose first language (L1) is English. Although the acquisition of grammatical gender has recently been the focus of many studies within the generative paradigm (cf. White, Valenzuela, Kozlowska-Macgregor, & Leung, 2004), Alarcón adopts a psycholinguistic approach to determine how certain linguistic variables contribute to learners' accuracy in this area of grammatical processing. In order to limit the scope of investigation, the author focuses on gender agreement between subject nouns and predicate adjectives.

Type
BOOK REVIEWS
Copyright
© 2008 Cambridge University Press

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References

REFERENCES

Bock, K. & Miller, C.A. (1991). Broken agreement. Cognitive Psychology, 23, 4593.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, L., Valenzuela, E., Kozlowska-Macgregor, M., & Leung, I. (2004). Gender and number agreement in nonnative Spanish. Applied Psycholinguistics, 25, 105133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar