The effect of language contact on Romance verbal paradigms : an empirical survey
Rather than conveying morphosyntactic meaning, conjugation classes determine how such properties are expressed. Conjugation classes are therefore ‘ornamental’ properties of language and clearly not essential to communication. Such purely formal distinctions tend to be absent from contact varieties l...
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Universidade do Porto
2008-01-01
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Online Access: | http://ler.letras.up.pt/uploads/ficheiros/6879.pdf |
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doaj-b54bb952f59a430d92523c703ecc31df2020-11-24T23:57:56ZporUniversidade do PortoLinguística : Revista de Estudos Linguísticos da Universidade do Porto1646-61952008-01-0131137154The effect of language contact on Romance verbal paradigms : an empirical survey Ana R. LuísRather than conveying morphosyntactic meaning, conjugation classes determine how such properties are expressed. Conjugation classes are therefore ‘ornamental’ properties of language and clearly not essential to communication. Such purely formal distinctions tend to be absent from contact varieties largely because adults have a natural tendency to bypass linguistic features that are perceived as semantically unnecessary (e.g., Seuren and Wekker 1986, McWhorter 2001). The goal of this paper, however, will be to show that language contact does not necessarily lead to a loss of meaningless forms. Building on recent work by Luís (2008, forthcoming), we provide empirical evidence which shows that Romance conjugation classes respond in different ways to language contact. In particular, we show that conjugation classes may undergo different types of morphological change, such as lexicalization, levelling, retention and extension. Our evidence will be drawn from contact varieties which have derived from the contact between one Romance language (either Portuguese or Spanish) and one (or more than one) non-Romance languagehttp://ler.letras.up.pt/uploads/ficheiros/6879.pdf. Morphological changelanguage contactverbal inflectiontheme vowelsconjugation classesIndo-PortugueseSpanish Romani |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
Portuguese |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ana R. Luís |
spellingShingle |
Ana R. Luís The effect of language contact on Romance verbal paradigms : an empirical survey Linguística : Revista de Estudos Linguísticos da Universidade do Porto . Morphological change language contact verbal inflection theme vowels conjugation classes Indo-Portuguese Spanish Romani |
author_facet |
Ana R. Luís |
author_sort |
Ana R. Luís |
title |
The effect of language contact on Romance verbal paradigms : an empirical survey |
title_short |
The effect of language contact on Romance verbal paradigms : an empirical survey |
title_full |
The effect of language contact on Romance verbal paradigms : an empirical survey |
title_fullStr |
The effect of language contact on Romance verbal paradigms : an empirical survey |
title_full_unstemmed |
The effect of language contact on Romance verbal paradigms : an empirical survey |
title_sort |
effect of language contact on romance verbal paradigms : an empirical survey |
publisher |
Universidade do Porto |
series |
Linguística : Revista de Estudos Linguísticos da Universidade do Porto |
issn |
1646-6195 |
publishDate |
2008-01-01 |
description |
Rather than conveying morphosyntactic meaning, conjugation classes determine how such properties are expressed. Conjugation classes are therefore ‘ornamental’ properties of language and clearly not essential to communication. Such purely formal distinctions tend to be absent from contact varieties largely because adults have a natural tendency to bypass linguistic features that are perceived as semantically unnecessary (e.g., Seuren and Wekker 1986, McWhorter 2001). The goal of this paper, however, will be to show that language contact does not necessarily lead to a loss of meaningless forms. Building on recent work by Luís (2008, forthcoming), we provide empirical evidence which shows that Romance conjugation classes respond in different ways to language contact. In particular, we show that conjugation classes may undergo different types of morphological change, such as lexicalization, levelling, retention and extension. Our evidence will be drawn from contact varieties which have derived from the contact between one Romance language (either Portuguese or Spanish) and one (or more than one) non-Romance language |
topic |
. Morphological change language contact verbal inflection theme vowels conjugation classes Indo-Portuguese Spanish Romani |
url |
http://ler.letras.up.pt/uploads/ficheiros/6879.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT anarluis theeffectoflanguagecontactonromanceverbalparadigmsanempiricalsurvey AT anarluis effectoflanguagecontactonromanceverbalparadigmsanempiricalsurvey |
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