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The Spanish Verbs Estar (To Be) and Ser (To Be) in Child-Directed Speech Cover

The Spanish Verbs Estar (To Be) and Ser (To Be) in Child-Directed Speech

Open Access
|Jul 2019

Abstract

The verbs ser and estar have been a subject of great debate in the literature, mainly because the adjectives that are combined with each copula are not in complementary distribution. A cognitive linguistics approach proposes that estar allows for a comparison of the entity referred to by the utterance’s subject and that very same entity that goes through a temporal change; on the other hand, ser allows for a comparison among entities of different type (Delbecque, 1997). I provide an analysis of spontaneous child-directed speech from a longitudinal database and find variation sets that may allow children to detect the differences between ser and estar. In child-directed speech, the entities referred to by the subject of a sentence with estar are always entities that undergo a perceptible change within an activity of daily life, while the entities referred to with ser never undergo a change.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/plc-2019-0008 | Journal eISSN: 2083-8506 | Journal ISSN: 1234-2238
Language: English
Page range: 162 - 183
Published on: Jul 30, 2019
Published by: University of Warsaw
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 times per year

© 2019 Mary Rosa Espinosa-Ochoa, published by University of Warsaw
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.