The impact of spoken French on the acquisition of written French in child L2 learners

Volume: 3 Number: 1 July 14, 2016
  • Malin ågren
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The impact of spoken French on the acquisition of written French in child L2 learners

Abstract

Written French is known as a deep orthography, presenting important differences between the spoken and written language systems, especially as far as morphology is concerned. This exploratory study of subject-verb agreement in number illustrates the long and laborious differentiation process of spoken and written French in child learners. The focus of the study is the L2 child, who learns to speak and write in the L2 more or less simultaneously. In a multiple case study, the written production of Swedish child L2 learners of French is compared to that of age-matched L1 children. The results demonstrate that while child L1 writers are strongly biased towards spoken language, the child L2 writers studied here are not yet able to take full advantage of either the spoken or the written language systems when writing in French.

Keywords

Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

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Journal Section

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Authors

Malin ågren This is me
Lund University, Sweden

Publication Date

July 14, 2016

Submission Date

July 14, 2016

Acceptance Date

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Published in Issue

Year 2013 Volume: 3 Number: 1

APA
ågren, M. (2016). The impact of spoken French on the acquisition of written French in child L2 learners. The Journal of Language Learning and Teaching, 3(1), 1-19. https://izlik.org/JA75FN54NA