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      A Prolegomenon to the Construct of the Native Speaker: Heritage Speaker Bilinguals are Natives Too!

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      Applied Linguistics
      Oxford University Press (OUP)

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          Heritage Languages: In the ?Wild? and in the Classroom

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            Different speakers, different grammars

            This article reviews several recent studies suggesting that — contrary to a widespread belief — adult monolingual native speakers of the same language do not share the same mental grammar. The studies examined various aspects of linguistic knowledge, including inflectional morphology, passives, quantifiers, and more complex constructions with subordinate clauses. The findings suggest that, in some cases, language learners attend to different cues in the input and end up with different grammars; in others, some speakers extract only fairly specific, ‘local’ generalizations which apply to particular subclasses of items while others acquire more abstract rules which apply ‘across the board’. At least some of these differences are education-related: more educated speakers appear to acquire more general rules, possibly as a result of more varied linguistic experience. These findings have interesting consequences for research on bilingualism, particularly for research on ultimate attainment in second language acquisition, as well as important methodological implications for all language sciences.
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              Operationalizing and measuring language dominance

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Applied Linguistics
                Applied Linguistics
                Oxford University Press (OUP)
                0142-6001
                1477-450X
                January 29 2014
                January 29 2014
                February 01 2014
                : 35
                : 1
                : 93-98
                Article
                10.1093/applin/amt049
                8abba757-dac6-4c41-b8d7-a545b1543ad7
                © 2014
                History

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