This week’s reading by Eve Clark
examined the ways in which children and adults use suffixes such as “-er” to
describe what something is or what it does. For example, a “stopper” is
something or someone who stops things. Based on Clark’s research, it would
appear that children below the age of 12 have a more limited ability to form and
interpret the “-er” variations of existing words such as “stop”. The “-er”
suffix can be added to create nouns, such as typewriter, or imply agency, such
as writer, and this is where the true difficulty lies. Humans often create new
descriptive words by utilizing a “conventional” format for “-er” which appears
to develop in adult speakers. As a result, speakers above the age of 12 tend to
have an increased ability to consistently use the “-er” suffix for its agentive
meaning while those beyond the age of 17 demonstrated an increased ability to
use “-er” for both its meanings.
In my opinion,
this pattern makes biological sense as the minds of younger children are still
developing and therefore less attuned to some of the nuances of English, or any
other language for that matter. It would surprise me if children acquired proper
usage of both meanings of the “-er” suffix from a very early age because it
would almost imply that they had some sort of advance knowledge on how to
properly apply the suffix despite tending to have smaller vocabularies and
lower understanding of the breadth of “conventional” language. This would in
turn imply that humans are attuned to some set way of speaking rather than
being highly malleable in their capacity for verbal communication. However, the
argument that “-er” is not innate and must be learned goes against reasoning we
have made in class about an understanding of parts or even all of human language
which is innate.
I argue that if an innate
understanding of language is true, then the ability to properly manipulate the “-er”
suffix is simply not a component of language which is ingrained while the brain
is developing. The “-er” suffix is very specific to pervading languages of the
modern world and a developing human brain therefore has no way of knowing how
to properly apply this suffix without first receiving significant exposure to
it.
This line of thought drives a
deeper question: what is the minimum level of innate understanding necessary
for language at the human-level to develop? My understanding is that some
animals have languages, but none possess all aspects of human language. The way
I see it, newborn children have a nebulous and abstract understanding of “language”,
which solidifies into an understanding of a specific language or languages as
they learn to speak. If this sort of baseline understanding of language exists,
I would be interested in an investigation to define its characteristics.
I like the connection here to innate-ness which ties interestingly back into earlier class discussions of Universal Grammar and Chomsky. I think the question of "minimum level of innate understanding" necessary to develop is an interesting one, I wonder if this could be compared to any other forms of understanding or development, or if they are linked (i.e. identity, social concepts)
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