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EMPIRICAL STUDY

You Say dientito, I Say dentito: Navigating Complex Word Formation in Second Language Spanish

Matthew T. Carlson

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: mtc173@psu.edu

The Pennsylvania State University

Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Matthew T. Carlson, Department of Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese, The Pennsylvania State University, 442 Burrowes Building, University Park, PA 16802. E‐mail:

mtc173@psu.edu

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First published: 21 April 2017

Data collection was supported by NSF grant BCS‐0544969. We also wish to thank Sherlyne Dalupang and Gabriela Salerno for their help in collecting the data.

Abstract

Native speakers seamlessly marshal morphological resources to create new words, displaying striking consistency even where multiple options are available, as when a stem contains a phonological alternation. This is true even when these options appear to be idiosyncratically applied in existing words. For example, in derived words, the alternation of diphthongs and monophthongs in certain Spanish stems defies traditional morphophonological analysis, but native speakers nonetheless agree on when to use one and when to use the other in novel derivations. Here we ask how second language learners of Spanish cope with this subtlety. Recently, native speakers’ agreement has been attributed to the way phonotactic and morpholexical properties influence morphological processing. In a lexical decision experiment, we show that while the polarity of learners’ responses differed from earlier native speaker results, their response latencies exhibit striking sensitivity to the very same ingredients shown to predict nativelike behavior.

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