INTERROGATIVE PRONOUNS CHTO ‘WHAT’, KTO ‘WHO’, KAKOI ‘WHICH’ AND LINES OF THEIR DERIVATIVES IN THE L1 ACQUISITION
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The article examines the acquisition of pronouns of the lines kto ‘who’, chto ‘what’ and
kakoi ‘which’, belonging to the interrogative, indefinite and negative groups, by Russian-
speaking children. We have used longitudinal data, those being recordings of the
speech of 5 children aged from 2 to 4 years. Analysis of the functional-semantic and
morphological-syntactic features of pronouns in the speech of children allowed us to
draw the following conclusions: children’s speed and ease of mastering the pronouns
depends not only on their frequency in the input, but also on the internal linguistic
features of each lexeme. The role is played by the combination of the function of a
pronoun in a specific utterance, and the basic meaning of the series: for example, in the
chto ‘what’ line such cognitively successful combination is “concreteness + objectivity”,
and in the kto ‘who’ line “animacy” refers to the lesser level of “concreteness” (this may
be explained by the later appearance of lexemes of this line in children’s speech). The
line of kakoi ‘which’ demonstrates association between the attributive meaning and a)
pure indefiniteness (including non-concreteness in irrealis) and b) deicticity, when primarily
non-deictic interrogative kakoi ‘which’ and indefinite kakoi-to ‘some’ in the speech
of children in relative-demonstrative, emphatic, and actualizing contexts approach the
demonstrative takoi ‘such’. The development of the morphological and syntactic side
of pronouns occurs in children without significant difficulties: there are almost no mistakes
in the word formation, although children often follow a strategy close to the strategy
of avoidance: children prefer to use only the initial forms of pronouns (including
the Gen. forms of negative pronouns), so these pronouns adopt certain adverbial traits
in the speech of young children and can be seen as unchangeable. The main syntactic
features are the use of pronouns within typical constructions, acquired on the whole,
and a large number of interrogative sentences in which the pronoun is not transferred
to the beginning. Refs 26.