Affiliation:
1. University of Massachusetts Amherst
Abstract
Abstract
The present study investigated the production and receptive knowledge of the Spanish subjunctive mood in
volitional clauses by 57 English-dominant heritage speakers in fifth, seventh, and eighth grades (ages 10–14), some of whom were
enrolled in a dual-language immersion program. Children’s self-reported frequency of use of Spanish affected command of this
structure, and participants showed more consistent selection of the subjunctive than production of this form. There were no
differences in production or selection between children in the dual-language immersion and monolingual English schools, but older
children produced and selected the subjunctive more than younger participants. The lexical frequency of individual subordinate
verbs did not affect subjunctive use. The role for frequency of use and asymmetrical performance between tasks support Putnam and Sánchez’s (2013) activation approach to heritage language acquisition.
However, the absence of an effect for bilingual schooling or lexical frequency and the increased use of subjunctive mood with age
do not strictly align with theories of a reassembly of features in heritage language acquisition, and argue for a protracted
development of subjunctive mood in heritage Spanish.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company