Authors
Patti Spinner, Rebecca Foote, Rose Acen Upor
Publication date
2017/4/26
Journal
Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism
Volume
8
Issue
4
Pages
446-476
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Description
For native speakers, congruent gender marking on determiners and adjectives facilitates recognition of subsequent nouns, while incongruent marking inhibits recognition (e.g., ). However, there is conflicting evidence regarding whether second language learners demonstrate this effect. We investigated this issue in Swahili. Native speakers and English-speaking L2 learners of Swahili in their 3rd-5th semester completed two word repetition tasks, one examining gender and one number. Participants heard verb-noun phrases in Swahili with verbal marking that was congruent, incongruent or neutral with respect to gender or number. The time to repeat each noun was recorded. Both language groups appeared sensitive to number marking; however, only native speakers appeared sensitive to gender marking. The findings suggest the lack of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
P Spinner, R Foote, RA Upor - Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism, 2017