Aspect in the L2 and L3 Acquisition of Greek

Karpava, S orcid iconORCID: 0000-0001-8416-1431, Grohmann, K and Fokianos, K (2012) Aspect in the L2 and L3 Acquisition of Greek. In: Cross-linguistic Influences in Multilingual Language Acquisition, Second Language Learning and Teaching. Springer, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg, pp. 41-62. ISBN ISBN 9783642295577

[thumbnail of Sviatlana Karpava, Kleanthes K. Grohmann and Konstantinos Fokianos. 2012. Aspect in the L2 and L3 Acquisition of Greek. In D. Gabrys´-Barker (ed.), Cross-linguistic Influences in Multilingual Language Acquisition, Second Language Learning and Teaching. Sp] Other (Sviatlana Karpava, Kleanthes K. Grohmann and Konstantinos Fokianos. 2012. Aspect in the L2 and L3 Acquisition of Greek. In D. Gabrys´-Barker (ed.), Cross-linguistic Influences in Multilingual Language Acquisition, Second Language Learning and Teaching. Sp) - Published Version
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Official URL: http://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783642295560

Abstract

This paper investigates different facets of the second language acquisition of Modern Greek by native speakers of Russian and Georgian, both adults and children, in the domain of aspectual marking in embedded clauses. The study investigates experimentally the inte-raction of lexical and grammatical aspect in those embedded sentential environments which are a locus of difference between Modern Greek and Russian: The former permits only per-fective aspect of the finite complement verb in the context under consideration, while the latter allows either perfective or imperfective aspect of the infinitival complement verb. The results of the experimental study reveal that L2 learners can reach native-like attainment, though there is L1 interference at the initial stage of L2 acquisition, thus providing evi-dence in support of the Full Transfer/Full Access Hypothesis. The large number of partici-pants and the different groups investigated further allow us to distinguish other variables re-levant for L2 acquisition, such as age of onset, length of residence, and so on, which were gathered through a detailed language history questionnaire. The results are interpreted sta-tistically for all relevant facets of the languages and participants involved, shedding some light on a number of intertwined issues involved in (early vs late) L2/L3 acquisition.


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