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How does childhood bilingualism and bi-dialectalism affect the interpretation and processing of pragmatic meanings?

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Antoniou, K 
Veenstra, A 
Kissine, M 

Abstract

jats:titleAbstract</jats:title>jats:pRecent research has reported superior socio-communicative skills in bilingual children. We examined the hypothesis of a bilingual pragmatic advantage by testing bilingual, bi-dialectal and monolingual children on the comprehension and processing of various pragmatic meanings: relevance, scalar, contrastive, manner implicatures, novel metaphors and irony. Pragmatic responses were slower than literal responses to control items. Furthermore, children were least accurate with metaphors and irony. Metaphors and irony were also the most difficult to process; for these meanings, pragmatic responses were slower than literal responses to the same critical items. Finally, pragmatic performance positively correlated with working memory. Despite this variation, we found no bilingual or bi-dialectal advantage over monolinguals in pragmatic responses or speed of pragmatic processing. This was also true despite bilinguals’ and bi-dialectals’ lower vocabularies as measured by formal tests. We conclude that bilingual children exhibit monolingual-like pragmatic interpretation, despite their often-reported weaker language knowledge in the target language.</jats:p>

Description

Keywords

pragmatic processing, pragmatic interpretation, implicature, bi-dialectalism, bilingualism

Journal Title

Bilingualism

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1366-7289
1469-1841

Volume Title

23

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Sponsorship
Isaac Newton Trust (MINUTE 1423(a))
Arts and Humanities Research Council (AH/N004671/1)
Fondation Wiener Anspach (unknown)