The Development of Bimodal Bilingualism: Implications for Linguistic Theory

Linguist Approaches Biling. 2016;6(6):719-755. doi: 10.1075/lab.6.6.01lil. Epub 2017 Jan 17.

Abstract

A wide range of linguistic phenomena contribute to our understanding of the architecture of the human linguistic system. In this paper we present a proposal dubbed Language Synthesis to capture bilingual phenomena including code-switching and 'transfer' as automatic consequences of the addition of a second language, using basic concepts of Minimalism and Distributed Morphology. Bimodal bilinguals, who use a sign language and a spoken language, provide a new type of evidence regarding possible bilingual phenomena, namely code-blending, the simultaneous production of (aspects of) a message in both speech and sign. We argue that code-blending also follows naturally once a second articulatory interface is added to the model. Several different types of code-blending are discussed in connection to the predictions of the Synthesis model. Our primary data come from children developing as bimodal bilinguals, but our proposal is intended to capture a wide range of bilingual effects across any language pair.

Keywords: bimodal bilinguals; code-blending; cross-linguistic influence; language acquisition; language architecture; sign languages.