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Where two worlds meet: language policing in mainstream and complementary schools in England
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Where two worlds meet: language policing in mainstream and complementary schools in England
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The UK’s shifting diasporic landscape: negotiating ethnolinguistic heterogeneity in Greek complementary schools post-2010
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Exploring linguistic hybridity and lexical creativity in the UK’s Greek Cypriot diaspora: the Grenglish project
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From village talk to slang: the re-enregisterment of a non-standardised variety in an urban diaspora
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The Development, Preservation and Loss of Differential Case Marking in Inner Asia Minor Greek
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Why and how to integrate non-standard linguistic varieties into education: Cypriot Greek in Cyprus and the UK
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Non-Standard and Minority Varieties as Community Languages in the UK: Towards a New Strategy for Language Maintenance
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Cypriot Greek as a heritage and community language in London: (Socio)Linguistic aspects of a non-standardised variety in a diasporic context
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The morphology of Silliot Greek: paradigmatic defectiveness, paradigmatic levelling, and affix pleonasm
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Attitudes towards Cypriot Greek and Standard Modern Greek in London’s Greek Cypriot community
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The Asia Minor Greek adpositional cycle: a tale of multiple causation
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Marking definiteness multiply: evidence from two varieties of Greek
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From syntagmatic to paradigmatic spatial zeroes: the loss of the preposition se in inner Asia Minor Greek
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Convergence in word structure: Revisiting agglutinative noun inflection in Cappadocian Greek
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Abstract:
Cappadocian Greek is reported to display agglutinative inflection in its nominal system, namely, mono-exponential formatives for the marking of case and number, and NOM.SG-looking forms as the morphemic units to which inflection applies. Previous scholarship has interpreted these developments as indicating a shift in morphological type from fusion to agglutination, brought about by contact with Turkish. This study takes issue with these conclusions. By casting a wider net over the inflectional system of the language, it shows that, of the two types of agglutinative formations identified, only one evidences a radical departure from the inherited structural properties of Cappadocian noun inflection. The other, on the contrary, represents a typologically more conservative innovation. The study presents evidence that a combination of system-internal and -external motivations triggered the development of both types, it describes the mechanisms through which the innovation was implemented, and discusses the factors that favoured change.
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Keyword:
agglutinative; Cappadocian Greek; fusional; inflectional class shift; language contact; multiple causation; noun inflection
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1075/dia.33.1.02kar https://westminsterresearch.westminster.ac.uk/download/7a12fb5ce31c68dac7c414d69b7512a1dba49f60a13bb0ed8c78ce4ac0485e00/2517497/Karatsareas%20%282016a%29.pdf https://westminsterresearch.westminster.ac.uk/item/9v8x2/convergence-in-word-structure-revisiting-agglutinative-noun-inflection-in-cappadocian-greek
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Syntactic Structures of the World’s Languages – Greek (Cappadocian)
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