Nagy, NaomiBlondeau, HeleneAnger, Julie2009-02-102009-02-102002Language Variation and Change; 15 (1): 73-1030954-3945http://hdl.handle.net/10315/2515ABSTRACT --We investigated the French of the first generation of Montreal Anglophones who had had access to French immersion schooling. Our aim was to determine the extent to which these Anglophones had acquired the variable grammar of their Francophone peers and how that was related to the type of French instruction received and to the types of exposure to French. In Montreal French, a subject NP may be “echoed” by a pronoun without emphatic or contrastive effect. Because this is not a feature of standard French, Anglophones who learned French primarily in school were not expected to exhibit it. On the other hand, Anglophones who frequently spent time with Montreal Francophones were expected to have picked it up. To test this hypothesis, we used a database of speech from 29 speakers, varying in their quantity and type of exposure to French. Multivariate analyses determined the degree of correlation of several linguistic and social factors (related to type and quantity of exposure to French) to the presence of a doubled subject. These data were then compared with that for L1 French. Speakers who were more nativelike with respect to the rate of subject doubling and effects of linguistic factors were those who had had more contact with native speakers, especially as adults.enMinority Language VariationFrenchSociolinguistic variationFrench -- QuebecSecond Language VariationFrench as a Second LanguageSecond language acquisition and "real" French: An investigation of subject doubling in the French of Montreal AnglophonesArticle