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Among the universal principles are those known as the principles of
the binding theory. These principles constrain the range of
interpretations that can be assigned to sentences containing
reflexives and reciprocals, pronouns, and referring expressions. The
principle that is relevant for pronouns, Principle B, has provided a
fertile ground for the study of linguistic development. Although it
has long been known that children make certain kinds of errors that
appear to contradict this principle, further experimental and
theoretical investigation reveals that the child does know the
grammatical principle, but implements the pragmatic knowledge
incorrectly. In fact, discoveries concerning children's knowledge of
Principle B are among the most well-known in the study of language
acquisition because of the dissociation between syntactic and
pragmatic knowledge (binding versus reference).
In this book the authors deepen and extend the results of years of
developmental investigation of Principle B by studying the interaction
of Principle B with verb phrase ellipsis and properties of the
interpretation of empty pronouns in ellipsis--properties of "strict"
and "sloppy" interpretation. This is the first experimental study of
these topics in the developmental literature. The striking results
show that detailed predictions from the "pragmatic deficiency" theory
seem to be correct. Many novel experimental results concern the
question of how children interpret pronouns, including elided
pronouns, and how they understand VP ellipsis. The authors present the
necessary theoretical background on Principle B, review and critique
previous accounts of childrens errors, and present a novel account of
why children misinterpret pronouns. The book will thus be of interest
not only to readers interested in the development of the binding
theory, but to those interested in the development of interpretation
and reference by children.
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