Does language loss follow a principled structural path? Evidence from Jersey Norman French
Autor: | Mari C. Jones |
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Přispěvatelé: | Jones, Professor M.C. [0000-0003-1246-0816], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository |
Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
Linguistics and Language
Language change Population Language attrition French language (Modern) Language and Linguistics Morpheme morphology Theoretical linguistics education English language (Modern) 060201 languages & linguistics education.field_of_study language change language contact 06 humanities and the arts Variety (linguistics) language.human_language Linguistics Jèrriais Obsolescence 0602 languages and literature language Norman French dialect Jersey linguistic corpus Psychology |
Popis: | This study examines contact-induced change in Jèrriais, the severely endangered Norman variety currently spoken by some 1% of the population of Jersey, one of the British Channel Islands. Today, English dominates all linguistic domains of island life, and all speakers of Jèrriais are bilingual. The analysis uses original data to test empirically whether Myers-Scotton's (2002) five theoretical assumptions about the structural path of language attrition (broadly defined as language loss at the level of the individual) also have relevance for the process of language obsolescence (broadly defined as language loss at the level of the community). It explores i) whether Jèrriais is undergoing contact influenced language change owing to its abstract grammatical structure being split and recombined with English, a hypothesis related to Myers-Scotton's Abstract Level model; and ii) whether different morpheme types of Jèrriais are related to the production process in different ways and are, accordingly, more or less susceptible to change during the process of language obsolescence, a hypothesis related to Myers-Scotton's 4-M model. In addition to its contribution to linguistic theory, this study increases existing knowledge about Jèrriais and makes data from this language available for systematic comparison with other languages. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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