The Vanishing Pronoun: A Case Study of Language Attrition in Russian
Abstract This study presents a shifting pattern in the use of second person singular pronouns of address in Russian by adult Russian immigrants in Toronto. The newly developing pattern is treated as a case of L1 attrition. The observed changes to the pronominal system of Russian are discussed in...
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Carleton University
2002-06-01
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Series: | Canadian Journal of Applied Linguistics |
Online Access: | https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/CJAL/article/view/19843 |
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doaj-6226a47abe5c4382b6999281a74965352021-03-02T05:54:45ZengCarleton UniversityCanadian Journal of Applied Linguistics1481-868X1920-18182002-06-0151131144The Vanishing Pronoun: A Case Study of Language Attrition in RussianDmitri Priven0Polycultural Immigrant and Community Services and Seneca CollegeAbstract This study presents a shifting pattern in the use of second person singular pronouns of address in Russian by adult Russian immigrants in Toronto. The newly developing pattern is treated as a case of L1 attrition. The observed changes to the pronominal system of Russian are discussed in the framework typically employed in language attrition literature, with reference to various linguistic phenomena such as lexical transfer, simplification of morphosyntax, markedness theory and competence vs. performance attrition. Reference is also made to sociolinguistic phenomena such as L1/L2 use in sociolinguistic domains, ethnolinguisitic vitality and shift in cultural identity.https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/CJAL/article/view/19843 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Dmitri Priven |
spellingShingle |
Dmitri Priven The Vanishing Pronoun: A Case Study of Language Attrition in Russian Canadian Journal of Applied Linguistics |
author_facet |
Dmitri Priven |
author_sort |
Dmitri Priven |
title |
The Vanishing Pronoun: A Case Study of Language Attrition in Russian |
title_short |
The Vanishing Pronoun: A Case Study of Language Attrition in Russian |
title_full |
The Vanishing Pronoun: A Case Study of Language Attrition in Russian |
title_fullStr |
The Vanishing Pronoun: A Case Study of Language Attrition in Russian |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Vanishing Pronoun: A Case Study of Language Attrition in Russian |
title_sort |
vanishing pronoun: a case study of language attrition in russian |
publisher |
Carleton University |
series |
Canadian Journal of Applied Linguistics |
issn |
1481-868X 1920-1818 |
publishDate |
2002-06-01 |
description |
Abstract
This study presents a shifting pattern in the use of second person singular pronouns of address in Russian by adult Russian immigrants in Toronto. The newly developing pattern is treated as a case of L1 attrition. The observed changes to the pronominal system of Russian are discussed in the framework typically employed in language attrition literature, with reference to various linguistic phenomena such as lexical transfer, simplification of morphosyntax, markedness theory and competence vs. performance attrition. Reference is also made to sociolinguistic phenomena such as L1/L2 use in sociolinguistic domains, ethnolinguisitic vitality and shift in cultural identity. |
url |
https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/CJAL/article/view/19843 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT dmitripriven thevanishingpronounacasestudyoflanguageattritioninrussian AT dmitripriven vanishingpronounacasestudyoflanguageattritioninrussian |
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