Marion Blondel
List of John Benjamins publications for which Marion Blondel plays a role.
Journal
Title
Acquiring Sign Language as a First Language / Acquisition d’une langue des signes comme langue première
Edited by Marie-Anne Sallandre and Marion Blondel
Special issue of Language, Interaction and Acquisition 1:1 (2010) 164 pp.
Subjects Cognition and language | Language acquisition | Multilingualism
Chapter 16. The blossoming of negation in gesture, sign and oral productions Sources of Variation in First Language Acquisition: Languages, contexts, and learners, Hickmann, Maya †, Edy Veneziano and Harriet Jisa (eds.), pp. 339–364 | Chapter
2018 Negation constructions in longitudinal adult-child data are an excellent source for the study of multimodality in language acquisition. First negative constructions seem to take over from early forms of rejection and avoidance, but tracing the transitions between actions and gestures, and between… read more
La négation chez les enfants signeurs et non signeurs: Des patrons gestuels communs The gesture–sign interface in language acquisition / L’interface geste–signe dans l’acquisition du langage, Morgenstern, Aliyah and Michèle Guidetti (eds.), pp. 141–171 | Article
2017 Cet article présente une étude de cas de l’expression de la négation jusqu’à 3 ans chez quatre enfants évoluant dans des environnements langagiers différents : majoritairement monolingue (anglais, français, LSF) ou bilingue (LSF-français), majoritairement unimodal (modalité visuo-gestuelle de la… read more
From gesture to sign and from gesture to word: Pointing in deaf and hearing children Gesture and Multimodal Development, Colletta, Jean-Marc and Michèle Guidetti (eds.), pp. 49–78 | Article
2012 In this paper, we explore the issue of (dis)continuity between gestures and signs and gestures and words by comparing three longitudinal follow-ups of a hearing monolingual French speaking child, a deaf signing child (LSF), and a hearing bilingual (French-LSF) child. Our study indicates that the… read more
Prosodie et acquisition de la langue des signes française: Acquisition monolingue LSF et bilingue LSF-français Acquiring Sign Language as a First Language / Acquisition d’une langue des signes comme langue première, Sallandre, Marie-Anne and Marion Blondel (eds.), pp. 82–109 | Article
2010 L’étude présentée ici vise à déterminer les paramètres gestuels de la prosodie et leur évolution dans deux études longitudinales, celle d’une enfant sourde (LSF) et celle d’une enfant entendante bilingue (français-LSF), entre 8 et 25 mois. Nous proposons que l’intensité, la fréquence et la durée… read more
From gesture to sign and from gesture to word: Pointing in deaf and hearing children Gesture and Multimodal Development, Colletta, Jean-Marc and Michèle Guidetti (eds.), pp. 172–202 | Article
2010 In this paper, we explore the issue of (dis)continuity between gestures and signs and gestures and words by comparing three longitudinal follow-ups of a hearing monolingual French speaking child, a deaf signing child (LSF), and a hearing bilingual (French-LSF) child. Our study indicates that the… read more
Introduction Acquiring Sign Language as a First Language / Acquisition d’une langue des signes comme langue première, Sallandre, Marie-Anne and Marion Blondel (eds.), pp. 3–10 | Article
2010 Symmetry and children’s poetry in sign languages Towards a Typology of Poetic Forms: From language to metrics and beyond, Aroui, Jean-Louis and Andy Arleo (eds.), pp. 143–164 | Article
2009 Within the overall framework of research into properties common to poetic forms around the world, we concentrate here on the properties of symmetry and binarity. These two aspects of structure are general enough in nature to allow us to extend poetic analysis to Sign Languages (SLs), which are… read more
Growing up bilingual in French and French Sign Language French Applied Linguistics, Ayoun, Dalila (ed.), pp. 334–376 | Article
2007 Rhythmic structures in French Sign Language (LSF) nursery rhymes Sign Language & Linguistics 3:1, pp. 59–77 | Article
2000 Research over the past three decades has brought attention to various ways in which linguistic structures are exploited to build poetic form in sign languages. These include recurring patterns of phonological elements (similar to rhyme, alliteration or assonance) that play a role in the structure… read more