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Learner and native-speaker differences in the acceptability of gustar-type psychological verbs in Spanish

Spanish -type psychological verbs have a reverse, intransitive structure that is notably different from their direct, transitive counterpart in English. Research has pointed to the dative marker to be the most problematic element for learners to acquire (Quesada, M. 2008. *Yo gusto pasteles de choco...

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Published in:International review of applied linguistics in language teaching, IRAL IRAL, 2018-09, Vol.56 (3), p.279-313
Main Authors: Kanwit, Matthew, Quesada, Margaret Lubbers
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description Spanish -type psychological verbs have a reverse, intransitive structure that is notably different from their direct, transitive counterpart in English. Research has pointed to the dative marker to be the most problematic element for learners to acquire (Quesada, M. 2008. *Yo gusto pasteles de chocolate: De la transitividad hacia la intransitividad en la adquisición de verbos psicológicos en español. In R. M. Ortiz Ciscomani (ed.), , 55–72. Hermosillo, México: Editorial Universidad de Sonora; Toth, P. D. 2003. Psych verbs and morphosyntactic development in instructed L2 Spanish. In S. Montrul & F. Ordóñez (eds.), , 468–497. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Press), although other studies have noted the difficulties of verb-theme agreement (Montrul 1997b; Toribio, A. J. & C. Nye. 2006. Restructuring of reverse psychological predicates. In C. Nishida & J. P. Montreuil (eds.), , 263–277. Austin, TX: Benjamins). This study examines how 24 low-intermediate and 24 high-intermediate learners of L2 Spanish with L1 English, as well as 20 native speakers (NSs), performed on a 99-item grammaticality judgment test. Sentences varied in their use of the dative marker, theme-verb agreement, and indirect object clitic pronouns. Reading times were also captured for each item. Results reveal that learners responded significantly differently from NSs. Furthermore, the fact that the most critical elements of such constructions were different for NSs than for what is currently emphasized in the classroom has relevant pedagogical implications.
doi_str_mv 10.1515/iral-2015-0102
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subjects Acceptability
Case marking
Clitics
Foreign language learning
Grammar
Grammatical agreement
Grammaticality
Judgment
Language acquisition
Linguistic Theory
morpho-syntax
Native Speakers
Psychological aspects
Romance languages
second language acquisition
Spanish as a second language learning
Spanish language
Verbs
title Learner and native-speaker differences in the acceptability of gustar-type psychological verbs in Spanish
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