1978
DOI: 10.1075/itl.39-40.03hat
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“Foreigner-Talk” Discourse

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Cited by 38 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Both mother-child talk (Gleitman et al 1984: 46-47) and foreigner talk (Hatch, Shapira andGough 1975, cited in Snow andFerguson 1977: 338) are known to sometimes evince empathetic modification under the influence of learner language, something which, though certainly an effect of the learner's presence or a reflex of his/her limited competence, can hardly be definitely conducive to language acquisition. Furthermore, äs has been frequently observed, simplified input does not solve the learnability problem; it only intensifies it by burdening the learner with the ability to learn something fairly complex from evidence which does not exhibit the target level of complexity.…”
Section: Amentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Both mother-child talk (Gleitman et al 1984: 46-47) and foreigner talk (Hatch, Shapira andGough 1975, cited in Snow andFerguson 1977: 338) are known to sometimes evince empathetic modification under the influence of learner language, something which, though certainly an effect of the learner's presence or a reflex of his/her limited competence, can hardly be definitely conducive to language acquisition. Furthermore, äs has been frequently observed, simplified input does not solve the learnability problem; it only intensifies it by burdening the learner with the ability to learn something fairly complex from evidence which does not exhibit the target level of complexity.…”
Section: Amentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Several studies have reached publication stage, including Katz (1977), which examines the use of FT by an American child playing with Hebrew-speaking children acquiring English. The most productive group seems to be that of Evelyn Hatch and her colleagues at the University of California at Los Angeles (e.g., Hatch et al, 1978, Larsen-Freeman, 1976, Campbell et aL, 1977. In Europe S. Pit Corder and his colleagues have studied FT phenomena in connection with the teaching of English as a second or foreign language.…”
Section: 'Ft' As Label and Ft As Field Of Studymentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Foreigner talk is typically produced by native speakers and directed at interlocutors felt to be inferior and incapable of fully acquiring the target language (Ferguson 1975(Ferguson ,1981Hatch et al 1978;Hinnenkamp 1982). From the inception ofthe Spanish colonial enterprise, indigenous persons were treated with a combination of paternalism and derision, and their ability to comprehend anything more than the simplest concepts was frequently called into question.…”
Section: The Andean Spanish Gerund: Phonological Prominence and Foreimentioning
confidence: 99%