Contact Linguistics. Chap


An Introduction to Contact Linguistics. References



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Winford2003.IntroductiontoContactLinguistics

An Introduction to Contact Linguistics. References


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1 See Hilts 2001 for an interesting attempt to show how various components of form and meaning can be rearranged to produce various lexical contact phenomena in Atepec Zapotec, under Spanish influence.

2 Some cases that appear to belong in this category involve the phonological adjustment of a native word on the model of a foreign one, without change in content. Weinreich (1953:50) cites the example of Tampa Spanish europa becoming uropa on the model of English Europe, and American Yiddish vakátsje becoming vekejSn on the model of American English vacation. It’s difficult to say whether these are really cases of phonological adjustment of the native word as distinct from importation (imitation) of the foreign counterpart.

3 Haugen (1953:399) includes what he calls “blended stems” under the category of “loanblends”. He gives the example of American Norwegian kårna, which appears to be a blend of English corner and Norwegian hyrna. Such cases seem to be rare, and might well be treated as cases of morphemic importation with phonemic substitution. Hence I omit them from the present classification.

4 Moeliono (1994:382) provides an interesting example of the coining of new items by way of extending a native derivational pattern to imported words. In the domain of sports, Indonesian had native terms like petinju “boxer” and pegulat “wrestler”, which correlate with bertinju “box” (v) and bergulat “wrestle” respectively. By analogy, a new paradigm of sport terms has arisen, each consisting of the prefix pe- and a (borrowed) stem. Hence we find petenis “tennis player”, pehoki “hockey player”, pejudo “judo player”, etc.

5 I am very grateful to David Odden for providing examples as well as very helpful comments on the integration of loanwords into various noun classes.

6 David Odden (pc Jan. 2001) points out that some stems in this class begin with n-, which appears historically to have been a prefix, but most stems in the class don’t appear with n-, so synchronically it seems that there is no overt prefix, even for words beginning in n-.



7 Heath’s distinction is very similar to Weinreich’s distinction between “outright transfer of morphemes” from one language to another and other kinds of “interference” involving transfer of semantic content or grammatical function on their own (without the phonological forms that express them in the source language).

8 This is not to deny that the “borrowing” of some function items may have some impact on the rl grammar. Brian Joseph (pc July 2001) gives the example of the Persian complementizer ki, which was adopted by Hindi and Turkish. This resulted in a pattern of complementation quite unlike those that previously existed in the two languages.

9 According to Vinet (1984:239), some relative clauses with preposition stranding also occur rarely in Montréal French, but the process is not as free as in PEI French.

10 As Brian Joseph (pc July 2001) points out, this change is not purely lexical, since it involves a structural pattern as well.

11 Pandit (1990:53) notes that "In fact, switching between the verb and the object NP is prolific in Hindi-English codeswitching as well as in Spanish-English codeswitching and codeswitching in general."

12 Myers-Scotton suggests that the reason "cell" is unmarked for locative case is that there is a subcategorization mismatch between Swahili -ni and English in, specifically, "-ni picks out its head as a general locative noun, while in carries more specialized locative content" (p. 126). This argument is rather weak. It seems more likely, as she herself suggests, that the lack of marking here reflects the fact that (monolingual) Swahili does not mark locative case on certain borrowings such as hospital.

13


14 My thanks to Bettina Migge (pc. August 2001) for providing some of the German example sentences.

15 Irish English also expresses the sense of a “continuative” or “extended” perfect with present tense forms rather than have, eg. She’s here since last week. This has been attributed primarily to superstrate influence, though it is possible that substrate influence also played some role (Odlin 1997a:32).

16 My thanks to Hannah Lin, Jinyi Wang and Janice Fon for help with the Taiwanese data. They inform me that a TM sentence like (29b) can be used only in certain pragmatic contexts, for instance, in reply to a question like “Did you have lunch?”

17 In Barbados, a more divergent creole variety of English emerged among slaves in the later plantation settings, and apparently co-existed with the “intermediate” variety (Bajan) that had emerged earlier. This more “basilectal” variety still survives in isolated rural and coastal villages today (Rickford 1992, Roy 1986)

18 For similar reasons, it seems preferable to use the term “nativization” rather than “creolization” to refer to the adoption of an erstwhile 2nd language variety or lingua franca as a first language.

19 Migge (to appear:5), apparently following Arends (1986) claims that Sranan Tongo has gone further than Ndjuka in extending the functions of de, using it also in equative constructions expressing class membership (that is, attributive predicate nominal structures) as in Lina de wan datra “Lina is a doctor”. However, my own Sranan data show that (n)a is the usual choice in these cases.

20 For a detailed discussion of these various theories, see Arends et al. (1995: Chapters 8 – 11).


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