Infants use statistics‐based word segmentation strategies from the preverbal stage. Statistical segmentation is, however, constrained by the Onset Bias, a language‐universal principle that disfavors segmentation that harms syllable integrity. Children eventually learn language‐specific exceptions to this principle. For instance, sub‐syllabic parsing occurs for vowel‐initial words in French liaison contexts, that is, when a word's final consonant surfaces as the following word's syllabic onset (e.g., /n/ in un /n/éléphant). In past research, French‐learning 24‐month‐olds succeeded in parsing a vowel‐initial pseudo‐word surfacing with variable liaison consonants. This study further investigated infants' liaison representation, its potential impacts on parsing, and its interaction with the Onset Bias. In Experiments 1 and 2, French‐learning 24‐month‐olds were familiarized with pseudo‐words with variable liaison‐like versus nonliaison‐like onset consonants, preceded by words that cannot trigger those onsets (e.g., un zonche; un gonche). We found no mis‐segmentation as vowel‐initial and successful segmentation as consonant‐initial. In Experiment 3, when the preceding words could trigger a liaison consonant that matched the onset of the following word (e.g., un nonche), infants showed a vowel‐initial mis‐interpretation, against the Onset Bias, revealing an effect of liaison knowledge. These results demonstrate that toddlers balance their use of language‐general principles/strategies and language‐specific knowledge during early acquisition.
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