This reading reminds me of a meme I’ve seen pop up on social
media. The meme usually follows the format “You: […}, Me, an intellectual: […].” Favorites so far have been:
You: Yikes
Me, an intellectual: Yicycles
You: chill out dude it was only a joke
Me, an intellectual: refrigerate it my brother for it was only a jest
You: chill out dude it was only a joke
Me, an intellectual: refrigerate it my brother for it was only a jest
Anyway, I decided to come up with a version applicable to
the reading:
You: to drop
Me, an intellectual: to fall something
I thought this would be funny if “me” were from the
perspective of a child. “To drop” is of course the conventional form, but a
child who is an “intellectual” would create a version they think is innovative –
“to fall something.” It doesn’t sound natural, but it isn’t wrong.
Anyway, I’ve recently become interested in the field of
speech pathology, and have been curious about studying language acquisition in
children. This reading was a delight. Clark’s study reveals how children fill
gaps in their vocabulary when they haven’t yet learned a conventional form. Clark
suggests that children rely on certain principles to do so: semantic
transparency, productivity, and conventionality. Clark uses these principles to
explain the acquisition of the word-formation device –er. Semantic transparency
explains why it’s normal for children to use compounding of the words “break”
and “man” to create “breakman” instead of “breaker.” Productivity explains how
children who identifty –er first in agent nouns will use it first to create new
agent nouns. Later, they will extend –er to include instrumental meaning (e.g.
typewriter). Lastly, conventional words are naturally given priority over other
forms. Conventionality also governs use of word formation devices.
I like your new meme!
ReplyDeleteI also think language acquisition is very interesting, and I wonder why we stop coining compound words as much when we are adults. Perhaps conventionality becomes more highly prioritized that communication efficiency. For instance, I am inclined to think that an adult who has forgotten the word "consultant" would use the phrase "someone who consults" rather than guessing "consult-man" or "consulter" even though these terms would get the same idea across.