Third Language Acquisition in Adulthood
Editors
| University of Florida
| MIT
| University of Florida and University of Ottawa
In recent years, researchers have acknowledged that the study of third language acquisition cannot simply be viewed as an extension of the study of bilingualism, and the present volume’s authors agree that a point of departure that embraces the unique properties that differentiate L2 acquisition from L3/Ln acquisition is essential. From linguistic, sociological, psychological, educational and cognitive viewpoints, it has become increasingly apparent that the study of L3/Ln acquisition can provide new evidence to help resolve ongoing debates in these areas of study. This volume uniquely provides a wide-ranging overview of current trends in the study of adult additive multilingualism from formal, psycholinguistic and sociolinguistic perspectives, adding new insights into adult multilingual epistemology. This collection includes critical reviews of L3/Ln morphosyntax, phonology, and the lexicon, as well as individual studies with unique language pairings including Romance, Germanic, Slavic, and Asian languages.
[Studies in Bilingualism, 46] 2012. vii, 312 pp.
Publishing status: Available
© John Benjamins Publishing Company
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
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vii–viii
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1–6
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Part 1. Theory
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9–32
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33–60
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61–78
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79–94
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95–114
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115–140
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Part 2. Empirical studies
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143–164
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165–194
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195–222
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223–254
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255–280
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281–310
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Index
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311–312
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“What does it mean to be a native speaker? The answer may differ for a monolingual or a multilingual person. This book explores unfamiliar territory, focusing beyond the monolingual native speaker model and challenging the reader to understand different shades of multilingualism. The reward for introducing a new viewpoint is in novel insights to many unanswered questions in linguistic theory, and this book is an important step in this direction.”
Maria Polinsky, Harvard University
“This collection of research studies and theoretical proposals is very welcome and will certainly advance our knowledge both of second and third language acquisition. Third Language Acquisition in Adulthood brings together linguistic, sociolinguistic and cognitive perspectives and reports cutting edge research on the acquisition of a variety of languages.”
Jasone Cenoz, University of the Basque Country, UPV/EHU
“In the recent upsurge of research on second language learning and bilingualism, multilingualism has been generally considered to be more of the same. This new volume challenges that view to demonstrate that learning and using three or more languages creates a powerful tool for testing new hypotheses about the grammar, the lexicon and the phonology. The approach to multilingualism that is described provides a broad framework for understanding how initial language learning constrains or enables later adult language experience. On some dimensions, it may indeed be more of the same, but on others it will require nothing less than a major revision to existing theories of language development.”
Judith Kroll, Center for Language Science, Pennsylvania State University
“
Third Language Acquisition in Adulthood is a very welcome publication which provides an excellent anthology of readings in the area of L3/Ln acquisition. The volume makes an important contribution to the field of L3/Ln research for several reasons. [...] The volume is also a valuable contribution to the field because it provides a solid overview of several important theoretical considerations that apply to the study of L3/Ln acquisition and, at the same time, presents up-to-date empirical research in the field. [...] Finally, it is crucial to point out that the volume raises a number of important questions that, as the editors Jennifer Cabrelli Amaro, Suzanne Flynn, and Jason Rothman suggest, should guide the development of the field of Overall, the book provides an excellent overview of the field of adult L3/Ln acquisition. It is not an introduction to the newly emerging field, and therefore, is not recommended for novice students of linguistics. However, it is a remarkable volume in that it marks the onset of the field of L3/Ln acquisition as an independent subfield of linguistics, and provides a solid overview of current research on adult multilingualism.”
Anna M. Krulatz, University of Utah, on Linguist List 24.2915, 2013
Cited by
Cited by other publications
No author info given
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Bardel, Camilla
Cabrelli Amaro, Jennifer, João Felipe Amaro & Jason Rothman
Clements, Maria & Laura Domínguez
Flynn, Suzanne
Flynn, Suzanne & Éva Berkes
Gisela Granena, Long, Michael H. & Yucel Yilmaz
Kim, Ah-Young (Alicia), Anne Park & Barbara Lust
Lust, Barbara, Suzanne Flynn, María Blume, Seong Won Park, Carissa Kang, Sujin Yang & Ah-Young Kim
Monville-Burston, Monique
Peukert, Hagen
POLINSKY, MARIA
Puig-Mayenco, Eloi, David Miller & Jason Rothman
ROTHMAN, JASON
Rothman, Jason, Jorge González Alonso & Eloi Puig-Mayenco
Rothman, Jason & Becky Halloran
Sanchez, Laura & Camilla Bardel
SANZ, CRISTINA, HAE IN PARK & BEATRIZ LADO
Sokolova, M. & E. Plisov
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 08 january 2021. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
Subjects
BIC Subject: CFDC – Language acquisition
BISAC Subject: LAN009000 – LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General