Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (44)
- Postprint (23)
- Other (3)
- Part of Periodical (1)
- Preprint (1)
Keywords
- morphology (14)
- late bilinguals (10)
- derivation (8)
- inflection (8)
- masked priming (7)
- morphologically complex words (5)
- second language (5)
- 2nd-language (4)
- agreement (4)
- english (4)
Institute
- Department Linguistik (41)
- Humanwissenschaftliche Fakultät (21)
- Potsdam Research Institute for Multilingualism (PRIM) (5)
- Department Psychologie (3)
- Multilingualism (3)
- Institut für Germanistik (1)
- Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät (1)
- Strukturbereich Bildungswissenschaften (1)
- Strukturbereich Kognitionswissenschaften (1)
- Verband für Patholinguistik e. V. (vpl) (1)
Morphological variability in bilingual language production is widely attested. Producing inflected words has been found to be less reliable and consistent in bilinguals than in first-language (functionally monolingual) L1 speakers, even for bilingual speakers at advanced proficiency levels. The sources for these differences are not well understood. The current study presents a detailed investigation of morphological generalization processes in bilingual speakers' language production. We examined past participle formation of German using an elicited-production experiment containing nonce verbs with varying degrees of similarity to existing verbs testing a large group of bilingual Turkish/German speakers relative to L1 German speakers. We compared similarity-based lexical extensions with generalizations of morphological rules. The results show that rule-based generalizations are used less often and more variably within the bilingual group than within the L1 group. Our results also show a selective effect of age of acquisition on the bilingual speakers' morphological generalizations.