Quantification in Swedish child language - with special reference to the quantifier expression alla
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to analyse and discuss Swedish speaking
children’s use and understanding of quantification with special reference
to the quantifier expression alla (‘all’). The data has been collected
from Richthoff’s corpus, the Göteborg Spoken Language Corpora and
an observation period I carried out at a preschool in Göteborg.
After describing and discussing several aspects of the syntax and the
semantics of Swedish quantification, I argue that we have good reasons
to treat Swedish quantifier expressions as a separate part of speech
(labelled Q). I then address the following questions: Which quantifier
expressions do children use? Which quantifier expressions do adults
use? How do children use quantifier expressions? How are quantifier
expressions used in speech directed to children? How do children
interpret alla – generically or specifically? When do they start
interpreting alla generically? I try to see what the data suggest as
answers to these questions, with special reference to the quantifier
expression alla. I also present data on the syntactic and semantic
problems the children appear to have.
In section 5 I explain some of the data by introducing the
psychological notion “theory of mind”, a label for social cognition
apparent in adults. I argue that some of the children’s difficulties with
quantifier expressions might be due to their difficulties with shifting
perspective in a social situation. Some of their problems, however, seem
to arise because the category Q is not fully developed in child language
– sometimes they therefore treat the quantifier expressions as other
categories. I argue that the children sometimes treat quantifier
expressions as modifiers to nouns. At the end of the paper I suggest an
account of children’s difficulties with quantification based on a proposal
for English and Korean speaking children (Kang 2001).
Degree
Student essay