Gradient competence at the Syntax-Discourse Interface
Gradient competence at the Syntax-Discourse Interface
In this article, we present additional support of Duffield's (2003, 2005) distinction between Underlying Competence and Surface Competence. Duffield argues that a more fine-grained distinction between levels of competence and performance is warranted and necessary. While underlying competence is categorical, surface competence is more probabilistic and gradient, being sensitive to lexical and constructional contingencies, including the contextual appropriateness of a given construction. We examine a subset of results from a study comparing native and learner competence of properties at the syntax-discourse interface. Specifically, we look at the acceptability of Clitic Right Dislocation in native and L2 Spanish, in discourse-appropriate context. We argue that Duffield's distinction is a possible explanation of our results.
218-243
Slabakova, Roumyana
1bda11ce-ce3d-4146-8ae3-4a486b6f5bde
Rothman, Jason
859b1f9a-4bd7-4a4d-8045-5eac2959bfb7
Kempchinsky, Paula
f0ba1b88-8348-4504-870d-13bbd35b086f
2011
Slabakova, Roumyana
1bda11ce-ce3d-4146-8ae3-4a486b6f5bde
Rothman, Jason
859b1f9a-4bd7-4a4d-8045-5eac2959bfb7
Kempchinsky, Paula
f0ba1b88-8348-4504-870d-13bbd35b086f
Slabakova, Roumyana, Rothman, Jason and Kempchinsky, Paula
(2011)
Gradient competence at the Syntax-Discourse Interface.
Eurosla Yearbook, 11, .
(doi:10.1075/eurosla.11.12rot).
Abstract
In this article, we present additional support of Duffield's (2003, 2005) distinction between Underlying Competence and Surface Competence. Duffield argues that a more fine-grained distinction between levels of competence and performance is warranted and necessary. While underlying competence is categorical, surface competence is more probabilistic and gradient, being sensitive to lexical and constructional contingencies, including the contextual appropriateness of a given construction. We examine a subset of results from a study comparing native and learner competence of properties at the syntax-discourse interface. Specifically, we look at the acceptability of Clitic Right Dislocation in native and L2 Spanish, in discourse-appropriate context. We argue that Duffield's distinction is a possible explanation of our results.
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Published date: 2011
Organisations:
Modern Languages
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Local EPrints ID: 353334
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/353334
ISSN: 1568-1491
PURE UUID: 83bc20a1-d379-4b2b-a7be-80ac42815f65
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Date deposited: 05 Jun 2013 11:03
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:48
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Author:
Jason Rothman
Author:
Paula Kempchinsky
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