Abstract :
This study examines syntactic and morphological aspects of the production and comprehension of
pronouns by 99 typically developing French-speaking children aged 3 years, 5 months to 6 years,
5 months. A fine structural analysis of subject, object, and reflexive clitics suggests that whereas
the object clitic chain crosses the subject chain, the reflexive clitic chain is nested within it. We
argue that this structural difference introduces differences in processing complexity, chain crossing
being more complex than nesting. In support of this analysis, both production and comprehension
experiments show that children have more difficulty with object than with reflexive clitics (with
more omissions in production and more erroneous judgments in sentences involving Principle B in
comprehension). Concerning the morphological aspect, French subject and object pronouns agree
in gender with their referent. We report serious difficulties with pronoun gender both in production
and comprehension in children around the age of 4 (with nearly 30% errors in production and
chance level judgments in comprehension), which tend to disappear by age 6. The distribution of
errors further suggests that the masculine gender is processed as the default value. These findings
provide further insights into the relationship between comprehension and production in the acquisition
process.