Antje Endesfelder Quick, Dorota Gaskins, Oksana Bailleul, Maria Frick, Elina Palola
Objectives:
This study investigates monolingual and code-mixed utterances in four bilingual children with different language combinations (German–English, English–Polish, Finnish–English, and French–Russian) in terms of utterance lengths (MLUs) and complexities offering a usage-based (UB) explanation based on cognitive mechanisms.
Methodology:
Utterances from four different child bilingual corpora were extracted and coded for individual monolingual languages and bilingual utterances.
Data and analysis:
35.441 utterances between the age of 2–4 were analyzed in terms of MLU and syntactic complexity.
Findings/conclusions:
Results showed that for all children monolingual MLUs and complexities reflect their input situations: the more input in one language, the longer and more complex those utterances were. However, in all four children code-mixed utterances were longer and more complex from the beginning of the recordings.
Implications:
This is the first study that systematically compares MLU scores and complexities of monolingual and bilingual utterances taking diverse language combinations into account and offering a UB explanation based on chunking and entrenchment processes as a new alternative for further research in bilingualism.
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