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The paper reports two studies of the development of false belief reasoning in bilingual Roma children in Bulgaria. No previous work has considered Roma children. Two studies were conducted, and in the second study the Roma children spoke a dialect of Romani that contains evidential markers, as does Bulgarian, their second language. Results reveal no advantage of bilingualism, and similar results with age to that found in other groups across the world. The bilingual group had better understanding of evidentials than the monolingual Bulgarian group, possibly related to the linguistic character of the markings. There is contradictory evidence about the relation of ToM and understanding of evidentiality.
VERSITA Central European Science Publishers, Warsaw, http://versita.com, in cooperation with journal's owner - Faculty of Psychology, University of Warsaw
VERSITA Central European Science Publishers, Warsaw, http://versita.com, in cooperation with journal's owner - Faculty of Psychology, University of Warsaw