The nature and frequency of relative clauses in the language children hear and the language children read: a developmental cross-corpus analysis of English complex grammar

Yaling Hsiao*, Nicola J. Dawson, Nilanjana Banerji, Kate Nation

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    1 Citation (Scopus)
    97 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    As written language contains more complex syntax than spoken language, exposure to written language provides opportunities for children to experience language input different from everyday speech. We investigated the distribution and nature of relative clauses in three large developmental corpora: one of child-directed speech (targeted at pre-schoolers) and two of text written for children - namely, picture books targeted at pre-schoolers for shared reading and children's own reading books. Relative clauses were more common in both types of book language. Within text, relative clause usage increased with intended age, and was more frequent in nonfiction than fiction. The types of relative clause structures in text co-occurred with specific lexical properties, such as noun animacy and pronoun use. Book language provides unique access to grammar not easily encountered in speech. This has implications for the distributional lexical-syntactic features and associated discourse functions that children experience and, from this, consequences for language development.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalJournal of Child Language
    Early online date7 Mar 2022
    DOIs
    Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 7 Mar 2022

    Bibliographical note

    Funding Information:
    The Oxford Children’s Corpus is a growing database of writing for and by children developed and maintained by Oxford University Press for the purpose of children’s language research. The work for this paper was supported by the British Academy Post-Doctoral Fellowship (PF2/180013) and the John Fell COVID Rebuilding Research Momentum Fund (0010144 CRRMF) awarded to Yaling Hsiao, a grant from the Nuffield Foundation (EDO/43392) to Kate Nation, and resources made available to Nilanjana Banerji by the department of Children’s Dictionaries and Children’s Language Data at Oxford University Press. Data and code associated with this paper are available on the Open Science Framework website ( http://osf.io/p9kgr/ ). We thank Songjun He for research assistance.

    Publisher Copyright:
    © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press.

    Keywords

    • child-directed speech
    • corpus analysis
    • grammatical development
    • reading
    • relative clauses
    • sentence processing

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Language and Linguistics
    • Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
    • Developmental and Educational Psychology
    • Linguistics and Language
    • General Psychology

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