Knowledge and Learning in Natural Language (Oxford Linguistics)

Author(s)

It is a simple observation that children make mistakes when they learn a language. Yet, to the trained eye, these mistakes are far from random; in fact, they closely resemble perfectly grammatical utterances by adults—who speak other languages. This type of error analysis suggests a novel view of language learning: children are born with a fixed set of hypotheses about language—Chomsky's Universal Grammar—and these hypotheses compete to match the child's ambient language in a Darwinian fashion. The book presents evidence for this perspective from the study of children's words and grammar, and how language changes over time.

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Name in long format: Knowledge and Learning in Natural Language (Oxford Linguistics)
ISBN-10: 019925415X
ISBN-13: 9780199254156
Book pages: 192
Book language: en
Edition: 1
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Dimensions: Height: 6.1 Inches, Length: 9.2 Inches, Weight: 0.69666074792 Pounds, Width: 0.5 Inches

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