Children are more sensitive to the Recursive Set-Subset Ordering than to Adjective Ordering Restrictions

Authors

  • Adina Camelia Bleotu ZAS Berlin University of Bucharest
  • Tom Roeper University of Massachusetts Amherst

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v7i1.5267

Keywords:

Romanian L1, adjectives, recursion, adjective ordering, sets, subsets

Abstract

The current paper investigates experimentally whether, in a context requiring identifying green leaves out of a set of long leaves, Romanian 4-year-olds and adults choose to place the Color adjective closer to the noun than the Size adjectives in accordance with a more rigid adjective ordering depending on the (type of) semantic property, or whether they choose to place the Set adjective closer to the noun than the Subset adjective, irrespective of the semantic property specified by the adjective (Size or Color). We find that both Romanian adults and children are more sensitive to the Set-Subset distinction, preferring to refer to the subset of green leaves out of a set of long leaves through frunzele lungi verzi ‘the green long leaves’. We argue that adjectives are primarily ordered by a Recursive Set-Subset Ordering Constraint (RSSO), while orderings of adjectives in terms of properties such as Size and Color are cognitive.

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Published

2022-05-05

How to Cite

Bleotu, Adina Camelia, and Tom Roeper. 2022. “Children Are More Sensitive to the Recursive Set-Subset Ordering Than to Adjective Ordering Restrictions”. Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America 7 (1): 5267. https://doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v7i1.5267.