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2016 | 52 | 4 | 629-662

Article title

A developmental approach to diglossia: Bilectalism on a gradient scale of linguality

Selected contents from this journal

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The cognitive benefits of bilingualism have an impact on the processing mechanisms that are active during the acquisition process in a way that results in language variation. Within bilingual populations, the notion of “language proximity” is also of key importance for deriving variation. Certain sociolinguistic factors can invest the process of language development and its outcome with an additional layer of complexity that results from the emergence of mesolectal varieties which blur the boundaries of grammatical variants. We report data on the acquisition and development of object clitic placement in the two varieties of Greek spoken in Cyprus, and on performance in executive control tasks by monolingual, bilectal, and bi-/multilingual children. Comparing findings across experiments, the present study identifies the different factors that define “bilectalism” within the greater context of multilingualism, merging sociolinguistic and neurocognitive insights about language variation and how they inform development in diglossic contexts that involve closely related varieties-a study in comparative linguality.

Publisher

Year

Volume

52

Issue

4

Pages

629-662

Physical description

Dates

published
2016-11-01
online
2016-11-16

Contributors

  • University of Cyprus
  • Cyprus Acquisition Team
  • Cyprus University of Technology
  • Cyprus Acquisition Team
  • Cyprus University of Technology
  • Cyprus Acquisition Team
author
  • Cyprus Acquisition Team

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_1515_psicl-2016-0025
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