Tüen Sie au gern apéröle, käffele oder kungfule?

How can we measure dialectal constructional productivity? Which factors determine degrees of productivity and the acceptability of creative ad hoc coinages in the domain of derivational processes? Based on data from a pilot survey (n=80), we discuss a range of factors influencing degrees of product...

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Main Authors: Karin Madlener, Mirjam Weder, Sophie Dettwiler
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Bern Open Publishing 2019-11-01
Series:Linguistik Online
Online Access:https://bop.unibe.ch/linguistik-online/article/view/5932
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spelling doaj-43c9b089d39847fbbf0548160dc9c7912021-08-30T12:18:52ZdeuBern Open PublishingLinguistik Online1615-30142019-11-0198510.13092/lo.98.5932Tüen Sie au gern apéröle, käffele oder kungfule?Karin Madlener0Mirjam Weder1Sophie Dettwiler2Universität BaselUniversität BaselUniversität Basel How can we measure dialectal constructional productivity? Which factors determine degrees of productivity and the acceptability of creative ad hoc coinages in the domain of derivational processes? Based on data from a pilot survey (n=80), we discuss a range of factors influencing degrees of productivity/creativity for the denominal -(e)le-verb pattern (e. g., käffele, apéröle, ipödle, kungfule) in Swiss German dialects. This morphological pattern is currently highly productive, as indicated by substantial numbers of creative ad hoc coinages (oral and written evidence) as well as our participants’ acceptability judgements (for both isolated verbs and verbs in sentences) and their elicited productions (meaning paraphrases and sentence contexts for ad hoc coinages). We discuss different types of evidence for constructional productivity, based on quantitative and qualitative data. Our data indicates that schema-based frequency/familiarity effects and analogy-based pattern extension contribute to the pattern’s productivity. The fact that the verbs’ constructional contexts partly influence their acceptability indicates that the derivational pattern stretches beyond the traditional domain of morphology such that morphological, semantic, and syntactic patterns jointly determine degrees of constructional productivity. https://bop.unibe.ch/linguistik-online/article/view/5932
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karin Madlener
Mirjam Weder
Sophie Dettwiler
spellingShingle Karin Madlener
Mirjam Weder
Sophie Dettwiler
Tüen Sie au gern apéröle, käffele oder kungfule?
Linguistik Online
author_facet Karin Madlener
Mirjam Weder
Sophie Dettwiler
author_sort Karin Madlener
title Tüen Sie au gern apéröle, käffele oder kungfule?
title_short Tüen Sie au gern apéröle, käffele oder kungfule?
title_full Tüen Sie au gern apéröle, käffele oder kungfule?
title_fullStr Tüen Sie au gern apéröle, käffele oder kungfule?
title_full_unstemmed Tüen Sie au gern apéröle, käffele oder kungfule?
title_sort tüen sie au gern apéröle, käffele oder kungfule?
publisher Bern Open Publishing
series Linguistik Online
issn 1615-3014
publishDate 2019-11-01
description How can we measure dialectal constructional productivity? Which factors determine degrees of productivity and the acceptability of creative ad hoc coinages in the domain of derivational processes? Based on data from a pilot survey (n=80), we discuss a range of factors influencing degrees of productivity/creativity for the denominal -(e)le-verb pattern (e. g., käffele, apéröle, ipödle, kungfule) in Swiss German dialects. This morphological pattern is currently highly productive, as indicated by substantial numbers of creative ad hoc coinages (oral and written evidence) as well as our participants’ acceptability judgements (for both isolated verbs and verbs in sentences) and their elicited productions (meaning paraphrases and sentence contexts for ad hoc coinages). We discuss different types of evidence for constructional productivity, based on quantitative and qualitative data. Our data indicates that schema-based frequency/familiarity effects and analogy-based pattern extension contribute to the pattern’s productivity. The fact that the verbs’ constructional contexts partly influence their acceptability indicates that the derivational pattern stretches beyond the traditional domain of morphology such that morphological, semantic, and syntactic patterns jointly determine degrees of constructional productivity.
url https://bop.unibe.ch/linguistik-online/article/view/5932
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