E-ISSN 1658-8355 | ISSN 1658-8363
 

Original Research 


Relative Clause Attachment Preference in Najdi Arabic Monolinguals and Najdi Arabic Learners of English

Saad M. Aldosari.


Abstract
There is cross-linguistic variation in how speakers process ambiguous relative clauses (RCs) (e.g., The girl saw the maid “NP1” of the princess “NP2” who was eating chocolate). English speakers, for example, prefer to interpret the RC (e.g., who was eating chocolate) as modifying the second noun phrase (the princess; low attachment), whereas Spanish and Modern Standard Arabic speakers prefer to interpret the RC as modifying the first noun phrase (the maid; high attachment) (e.g., Bidaoui et al., 2016; Dussias, 2003). The present study examined the RC attachment preference in monolingual speakers and second-language (L2) learners in two offline interpretation experiments. Experiment 1 tested the RC attachment preference in Najdi Arabic monolinguals, revealing a preference for the first noun phrase (i.e., high attachment) in their interpretation of Najdi Arabic ambiguous RCs. These results are consistent with Gibson et al.’s (1996) claim that the principle of Predicate Proximity is more likely to override the u

Key words: Najdi Arabic, relative clause attachment, second language acquisition, shallow structure hypothesis


 
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Pubmed Style

Saad M. Aldosari. Relative Clause Attachment Preference in Najdi Arabic Monolinguals and Najdi Arabic Learners of English. CSLL. 2024; 4(1): 15-40. doi:10.5455/CSLL.182607


Web Style

Saad M. Aldosari. Relative Clause Attachment Preference in Najdi Arabic Monolinguals and Najdi Arabic Learners of English. https://www.criticalstudiesinlanguagesandlit.design/?mno=182607 [Access: January 01, 2025]. doi:10.5455/CSLL.182607


AMA (American Medical Association) Style

Saad M. Aldosari. Relative Clause Attachment Preference in Najdi Arabic Monolinguals and Najdi Arabic Learners of English. CSLL. 2024; 4(1): 15-40. doi:10.5455/CSLL.182607



Vancouver/ICMJE Style

Saad M. Aldosari. Relative Clause Attachment Preference in Najdi Arabic Monolinguals and Najdi Arabic Learners of English. CSLL. (2024), [cited January 01, 2025]; 4(1): 15-40. doi:10.5455/CSLL.182607



Harvard Style

Saad M. Aldosari (2024) Relative Clause Attachment Preference in Najdi Arabic Monolinguals and Najdi Arabic Learners of English. CSLL, 4 (1), 15-40. doi:10.5455/CSLL.182607



Turabian Style

Saad M. Aldosari. 2024. Relative Clause Attachment Preference in Najdi Arabic Monolinguals and Najdi Arabic Learners of English. Critical Studies in Languages and Literature, 4 (1), 15-40. doi:10.5455/CSLL.182607



Chicago Style

Saad M. Aldosari. "Relative Clause Attachment Preference in Najdi Arabic Monolinguals and Najdi Arabic Learners of English." Critical Studies in Languages and Literature 4 (2024), 15-40. doi:10.5455/CSLL.182607



MLA (The Modern Language Association) Style

Saad M. Aldosari. "Relative Clause Attachment Preference in Najdi Arabic Monolinguals and Najdi Arabic Learners of English." Critical Studies in Languages and Literature 4.1 (2024), 15-40. Print. doi:10.5455/CSLL.182607



APA (American Psychological Association) Style

Saad M. Aldosari (2024) Relative Clause Attachment Preference in Najdi Arabic Monolinguals and Najdi Arabic Learners of English. Critical Studies in Languages and Literature, 4 (1), 15-40. doi:10.5455/CSLL.182607





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