Authors
Laurence B Leonard, Bence Kas, Csaba Pléh
Publication date
2009
Publisher
American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
Description
Purpose
Hungarian is a null-subject language with both agglutinating and fusional elements in its verb inflection system, and agreement between the verb and object as well as between the verb and subject. These characteristics make this language a good test case for alternative accounts of the grammatical deficits of children with language impairment (LI).
Method
Twenty-five children with LI and 25 younger children serving as vocabulary controls (VC) repeated sentences whose verb inflections were masked by a cough. The verb inflections marked distinctions according to tense, person, number, and definiteness of the object.
Results
The children with LI were significantly less accurate than the VC children but generally showed the same performance profile across the inflection types. For both groups of children, the frequency of occurrence of the inflection in the language was a significant predictor of accuracy …
Total citations
20092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320241346363584534832