The acquisition of Welsh morphosyntax

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Standard Standard

The acquisition of Welsh morphosyntax. / Thomas, Enlli; Binks, Hanna; Lloyd-Williams, Sian.
The acquisition of Celtic languages . ed. / Vicky Chondrogianni; Ciara O'Toole; Enlli Thomas. Cambridge University Press, 2024.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Thomas, E, Binks, H & Lloyd-Williams, S 2024, The acquisition of Welsh morphosyntax. in V Chondrogianni, C O'Toole & E Thomas (eds), The acquisition of Celtic languages . Cambridge University Press.

APA

Thomas, E., Binks, H., & Lloyd-Williams, S. (in press). The acquisition of Welsh morphosyntax. In V. Chondrogianni, C. O'Toole, & E. Thomas (Eds.), The acquisition of Celtic languages Cambridge University Press.

CBE

Thomas E, Binks H, Lloyd-Williams S. 2024. The acquisition of Welsh morphosyntax. Chondrogianni V, O'Toole C, Thomas E, editors. In The acquisition of Celtic languages . Cambridge University Press.

MLA

Thomas, Enlli, Hanna Binks and Sian Lloyd-Williams "The acquisition of Welsh morphosyntax"., Chondrogianni, Vicky O'Toole, Ciara Thomas, Enlli (editors). The acquisition of Celtic languages . Cambridge University Press. 2024.

VancouverVancouver

Thomas E, Binks H, Lloyd-Williams S. The acquisition of Welsh morphosyntax. In Chondrogianni V, O'Toole C, Thomas E, editors, The acquisition of Celtic languages . Cambridge University Press. 2024

Author

Thomas, Enlli ; Binks, Hanna ; Lloyd-Williams, Sian. / The acquisition of Welsh morphosyntax. The acquisition of Celtic languages . editor / Vicky Chondrogianni ; Ciara O'Toole ; Enlli Thomas. Cambridge University Press, 2024.

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - The acquisition of Welsh morphosyntax

AU - Thomas, Enlli

AU - Binks, Hanna

AU - Lloyd-Williams, Sian

PY - 2024/4/3

Y1 - 2024/4/3

N2 - Welsh grammar is characterised by an interesting set of morphosyntactic structures. Unique features within these structures distinguish Welsh – along with Irish and Scottish Gaelic – from other Indo-European varieties, and these differences offer a novel lens through which we can explore how language is learned. How children acquire the structures of Welsh, and how these structures are used by adults, has been the focus of a growing body of researchover the past few years. The results of these studies have helped shape our understanding of the linguistic profiles of different types of bilingual Welsh-English speakers, in terms of their rate and pattern(s) of learning, and have highlighted some of the key factors influencing potential and achieved linguistic outcomes when learning within a minoritized bilingual context, contributing new and important insights into the various theoretical debates in the field. In this chapter we outline how various morphosyntactic structures work in Welsh, and provide an overview of what is known from the current literature about L1 and L2 acquisition of Welsh morphosyntax, as spoken by both typically and atypically developing bilinguals. The different types of methodologies that have been applied to the study of Welsh grammar with adults and children will be discussed throughout, and suggestions for future studies presented at the end.

AB - Welsh grammar is characterised by an interesting set of morphosyntactic structures. Unique features within these structures distinguish Welsh – along with Irish and Scottish Gaelic – from other Indo-European varieties, and these differences offer a novel lens through which we can explore how language is learned. How children acquire the structures of Welsh, and how these structures are used by adults, has been the focus of a growing body of researchover the past few years. The results of these studies have helped shape our understanding of the linguistic profiles of different types of bilingual Welsh-English speakers, in terms of their rate and pattern(s) of learning, and have highlighted some of the key factors influencing potential and achieved linguistic outcomes when learning within a minoritized bilingual context, contributing new and important insights into the various theoretical debates in the field. In this chapter we outline how various morphosyntactic structures work in Welsh, and provide an overview of what is known from the current literature about L1 and L2 acquisition of Welsh morphosyntax, as spoken by both typically and atypically developing bilinguals. The different types of methodologies that have been applied to the study of Welsh grammar with adults and children will be discussed throughout, and suggestions for future studies presented at the end.

M3 - Chapter

BT - The acquisition of Celtic languages

A2 - Chondrogianni, Vicky

A2 - O'Toole, Ciara

A2 - Thomas, Enlli

PB - Cambridge University Press

ER -