The role of animate and inanimate nouns in determining sentence voice

Children aged 6 and 8 years were required to recall a series of sentences, some with an animate actor and an inanimate acted‐upon element and some with these relations reversed. Sentences were presented in either active or passive voice. While hearing a sentence the children saw a picture of the sit...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe British journal of psychology Vol. 70; no. 1; pp. 135 - 141
Main Author Dewart, M. Hazel
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.02.1979
Cambridge University Press
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Summary:Children aged 6 and 8 years were required to recall a series of sentences, some with an animate actor and an inanimate acted‐upon element and some with these relations reversed. Sentences were presented in either active or passive voice. While hearing a sentence the children saw a picture of the situation it described and recall was cued with a picture of either the actor or the acted‐upon element of the situation. Pictures of the acted‐upon element led to active sentences being recalled as passives more often than did pictures of the actor. There was a strong tendency for passive sentences with animate actor and inanimate acted‐upon to be recalled as actives, whereas active sentences with inanimate actor and animate acted‐upon tended to be changed to passives in recall. Thus, it appears that in transitive sentences with one animate and one inanimate noun, children prefer to put the animate noun first and this preference affects their choice of sentence voice. The maintenance of this preferred ordering of animate and inanimate nouns may constitute one of the functions of the passive voice in a language.
Bibliography:istex:4897DF56F86323F565D0F5C1E19C7D092346DE09
ark:/67375/WNG-8MB7JM1V-W
ArticleID:BJOP2151
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0007-1269
2044-8295
DOI:10.1111/j.2044-8295.1979.tb02151.x