Chapter 3
The second language acquisition of variation in adulthood and
language change
Research on the second language acquisition of
sociolinguistic variation is grounded in an understanding of
sociohistorical linguistics. The patterns attested in language
change provide a foundation for understanding the language of second
language learners. This chapter provides an overview of research on
adult L2 sociolinguistics and shines a light on studies that
demonstrate how linguists might bridge the gap between the fields of
historical linguistics and second language acquisition (e.g., Giacalone Ramat (1995) for
L2 Italian, Donaldson
(2017) for L2 French and Geeslin (2002) for L2 Spanish). Moving from
studies that explicitly explore this connection, the chapter
identifies other findings in L2 research that bridge this gap, and
offers suggestions for future inquiry at the intersection of these
two fields.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction: Sociolinguistics in adult second language
- 2.Trends in research on adult second language variation
- 3.Connections between SLA language variation and language
change
- 4.SLA and the historical sociolinguistics of language
change: Challenges and opportunities
- 5.Conclusion
-
Notes
-
References