“Some grammatical morphemes tend to be acquired early, some late — and instruction does not change this order.” –Dr. Stephen Krashen
Krashen and his collaborators (including Dulay & Burt, 1973, 1974) studied child ESL learners and proposed the following general sequence for English morphemes:
| Approx. Acquisition Order | Morphemes | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | -ing (progressive) | He is running → very early |
| 2 | plural -s | dogs, cats |
| 3 | prepositions: in, on | in the box, on the table |
| 4 | possessive -‘s | John’s book |
| 5 | copula “be” (am, is, are) | He is tall |
| 6 | auxiliary “be” | He is running |
| 7 | articles: a, the | a dog, the cat |
| 8 | regular past -ed | I walked |
| 9 | third-person singular -s | She runs |
| 10 | irregular past tense verbs | went, ate |
| 11 | contractible forms | He’s, I’m |
Key points about NOH
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Acquisition ≠ learning
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NOH predicts what learners acquire naturally, not necessarily what they are explicitly taught.
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Order is relatively stable across learners
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The same sequence is observed in children and adult ESL learners.
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L1 background has surprisingly little effect on the order.
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Instruction has limited effect on order
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You can teach a structure early, but learners may still acquire it later if it’s “later” in the natural order.
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Focus on meaning and input
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Krashen emphasizes comprehensible input (
n+1) rather than explicit grammar drills.
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Mnemonic Order
“ING PLU PREP POS COP AUX ART PAST 3PS IRR”
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ING = progressive
- He is running fast.
- They are singing loudly.
- I was reading a book.
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PLU = plural
- I have two dogs.
- She bought three apples.
- The cars are parked outside.
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PREP = in/on
- The book is in the bag.
- She is sitting on the chair.
- Put the pen in the drawer.
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POS = possessive
- That is John’s hat.
- I like my sister’s room.
- The dog’s tail is wagging.
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COP = copula be
- She is happy.
- They are tired.
- I am ready.
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AUX = auxiliary be
- He is running.
- They were sleeping.
- I am studying English.
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ART = articles a/the
- I saw a cat.
- The dog is barking.
- She wants a sandwich.
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PAST = regular past -ed
- I walked to school.
- She played the piano.
- They cleaned their room.
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3PS = third-person singular -s
- She runs every morning.
- He likes ice cream.
- The dog barks loudly.
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IRR = irregular past tense
- I went to the store.
- She ate lunch.
- They saw a movie.
