“…There is growing evidence that listeners use both linguistic and extralinguistic context to predict linguistic behavior (for a review, see Kuperberg & Jaeger, 2016). Several studies have shown that speaking style and a talker's accent can hinder and facilitate morphosyntactic processing (e.g., 2 Hanulíková et al, 2012;Hanulíková, 2019;Staum Casasanto, 2008;Viebahn, Ernestus, & McQueen, 2017;Weissler & Brennan, 2020). For example, non-standard use of grammatical gender agreement in Dutch (*het winkel instead of de winkel, 'the store'; een *groen winkel instead of een groene winkel, 'a green store') has been shown to cause higher processing cost (in terms of a more pronounced P600 effect) when the speaker had a native Dutch accent compared to a non-native (Turkish) accent (Hanulíková et al, 2012).…”