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121
Sprache und Gesellschaft im Wandel
Kim, Agnes. - 2020
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122
Subjectification and listener power
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123
The virtue of imperfection. Gjorgji Pulevski’s Macedonian–Albanian–Turkish dictionary (1875) as a window into historical multilingualism in the Ottoman Balkans
In: Sonnenhauser, Barbara (2020). The virtue of imperfection. Gjorgji Pulevski’s Macedonian–Albanian–Turkish dictionary (1875) as a window into historical multilingualism in the Ottoman Balkans. Journal of Historical Sociolinguistics, 6(1):1-29. (2020)
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124
How to explain diachronic variation of politeness. The example of German pronouns of address
In: Lingue e Linguaggi; Volume 36 (2020); 43-58 (2020)
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125
Remotivating inflectional classes: An unexpected effect of grammaticalization
Livio Gaeta. - : John Benjamins, 2020. : country:NLD, 2020. : place:Amsterdam & Philadelphia, 2020
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126
Latino, Latina, Latin@, Latine, and Latinx: Gender Inclusive Oral Expression in Spanish
In: Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository (2020)
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127
Factors constraining subject expression in european Portuguese spoken in Hamburg. A bi-generational corpus Investigation
Flores, Cristina; Rinke, Esther. - : Presses universitaires de Caen, 2020
Abstract: The present study investigates subject expression in two generations of Portuguese migrants living in Hamburg, Germany. Based on a corpus of oral speech, we aim to assess whether second generation heritage speakers (HSs) differ from first generation migrants with respect to the factors constraining subject realisation/omission in European Portuguese (EP), a null subject language, in contact with German, a non-null subject language. The results do not reveal evidence in favour of ongoing language change, given that there are neither quantitative nor qualitative differences between the two generations of speakers. They show very similar overall rates of subject omission (around 67%) and they reveal sensitivity to the very same determining factors of subject pronoun realisation/omission, namely person and number, verb type, switch reference (topic continuity [TC]/topic shift [TS]) and distance. This finding is in line with previous corpus studies investigating the spontaneous speech of different generations of bilingual speakers or comparing monolingual and bilingual speakers of the same null subject language (e.g., Flores-Ferrán, 2004; Nagy, 2015). We conclude that language contact per se does not necessarily lead to a diverging grammar at an inter-generational level, as long as stable input conditions allow for the acquisition of the constraints that are valid for null subject languages.
Keyword: European Portuguese; heritage speakers; Humanidades::Línguas e Literaturas; inter-generational language change; Social Sciences; spontaneous speech corpus; subject realisation and omission
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1822/68036
https://doi.org/10.4000/discours.10648
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128
Language Acquisition In The Past
In: Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations (2020)
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129
DialectGram: Detecting Dialectal Variation at Multiple Geographic Resolutions
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2020)
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130
In Search of ISL's Pre-History
In: Teanga: The Journal of the Irish Association for Applied Linguistics, Vol 11 (2020) (2020)
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131
Formal Variation and Language Change in Catalan Quantifiers: The Role of Pragmatics
In: Catalan Journal of Linguistics (2020) (2020)
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132
'O li'ili'I 'o lisega 'o le fanaa'e: Missionary and government influences on Samoan language change 1906-2014
Tuimuaiava, Sadat Petelo. - : Victoria University of Wellington, 2020
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133
Coercion for the ages? A thousand years of parallel inchoative histories for the French passé simple and passé composé
In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 5, No 2 (2020): PLSA Special Issue – Formal Approaches to Grammaticalization; 51–66 ; 2473-8689 (2020)
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134
How we got here: Short-scale change in identity labels for trans, cis, and non-binary people in the 2000s
In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 5, No 1 (2020): Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; 499–513 ; 2473-8689 (2020)
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135
Diglossia and language contact : language variation and change in North Africa
Sayahi, Lotfi. - Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press, 2019
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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136
Die Familiennamen der Reichsstadt Frankfurt am Main im 15. Jahrhundert
Steffens, Rudolf. - St. Ingbert : Röhrig Universitätsverlag, 2019
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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137
The Cambridge handbook of systemic functional linguistics
Thompson, Geoff (Herausgeber); Fontaine, Lise (Herausgeber); Schönthal, David (Herausgeber). - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2019
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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138
Language, the singer and the song : the sociolinguistics of folk performance
Watts, Richard J.; Morrissey, Franz Andres. - Singapore : Cambridge University Press, 2019
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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139
La déflexivité dans les langues d'Europe
Bracquenier, Christine (Herausgeber); Rocchetti, Alvaro (Herausgeber); Begioni, Louis (Herausgeber). - Rennes : PUR, Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2019
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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140
Compendium of the Sassarese language: a survey of genesis, structure, and language awareness
Linzmeier, Laura. - München : Ibykos Verlag, 2019
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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