Publication - Tense, Aspect and S-V Agreement: A case study of a Greek-speaking child with Specific Language Impairment [in Greek]
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Tense, Aspect and S-V Agreement: A case study of a Greek-speaking child with Specific Language Impairment [in Greek]

Research Area:  
    
Type:  
In Proceedings

 

Year: 2001
Authors: Spyridoula Stamouli
Book title: Studies in Greek Linguistics: Proceedings of the 21st Annual Meeting of the Department of Linguistics, School of Philology, Faculty of Philosophy, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Pages: 712-723
Address: Θεσσαλονίκη
Organization: Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Faculty of Philosophy, School of Philology, Department of Linguistics
Date: 12-14 Μαΐου 2000
Abstract:
In this paper spontaneous speech data from a Greek SLI child (age 4.3) are presented with respect to the morphosyntactic properties of the verbal domain. The morphosyntactic categories under study are Tense, Aspect and Subject-Verb Agreement. The central observation about the child's verbal grammar is that tense marking appears to be the most problematic domain, whereas errors of S-V agreement are rare. Tense marking in obligatory contexts appears to be correctly used for present tense (90% correct use) but problematic for past tenses (56.8% correct use). Imperfective aspect predominates in verb forms, since Present tense is the most frequently used verb form. Verb forms marked for imperfective aspect underspecified for tense features (Past tense forms) substitute Perfective Past and Perfective modal forms in contexts that require verb forms marked for perfective aspect. S-V agreement is correctly marked in all persons singular and plural (over 98% correct marking).
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