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81
A look at some (alleged) morpho-syntactic isoglosses between Greek and Anatolian: the modal particle in epic Greek ...
De Decker, Filip. - : Zenodo, 2021
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82
A look at some (alleged) morpho-syntactic isoglosses between Greek and Anatolian: the modal particle in epic Greek ...
De Decker, Filip. - : Zenodo, 2021
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83
Word classes in language contact
In: The Oxford Handbook of Word Classes ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03276022 ; The Oxford Handbook of Word Classes, In press (2021)
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84
A unified approach to the study of language contact: Cross-language priming and change in adjective/noun order
In: ISSN: 1367-0069 ; International Journal of Bilingualism ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03354757 ; International Journal of Bilingualism, SAGE Publications, 2021, pp.136700692110339. ⟨10.1177/13670069211033909⟩ (2021)
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85
Pattern borrowing and hybridization in Mubi (East Chadic): The importance of congruence
In: ISSN: 1750-1245 ; EISSN: 1755-2036 ; Word Structure ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03507468 ; Word Structure, [Edinburgh]: Edinburgh University Press, 2021, Morphology in Contact, 14 (2), pp.246-270. ⟨10.3366/word.2021.0189⟩ (2021)
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86
Contact-induced change and mobility: A cross-disciplinary approach to Romani in Latin America
In: Language Ecology ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03138395 ; Language Ecology, In press (2021)
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87
Papuan Malay – A language of the Austronesian-Papuan contact zone
Kluge, Angela. - 2021
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88
Address terms among the Russian ethnic minority in Lithuania in offline and online communication: an emerging new identity
In: Studies of Transition States and Societies ; 12 ; 2 ; 38-61 (2021)
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89
Language Contact: A Historical Sociolinguistic Reconstruction of Colloquial Singapore English in Relation to its Chinese Substrates
Li, Lijun. - : Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Hamburg Carl von Ossietzky, 2021
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90
The pre-nasal allophonic splitting of /ɛ/ in Toronto Heritage Cantonese
In: English Faculty Scholarship (2021)
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91
Slavic Alpine micro-varieties as part of an “Alpensprachbund”?
In: STUF - Language Typology and Universals ; 74 (2021), 1. - S. 163-184. - De Gruyter Akademie. - ISSN 0044-331X. - eISSN 2196-7148 (2021)
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92
El español como L2 en niños misak: la organización de la clase ; Spanish as a Second Language (L2) in Misak children: the class orga­nisation
Chamorro Mejía, Mónica Emma Lucía. - : Universidad de Alcalá. Servicio de Publicaciones, 2021
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93
The Variation of English in Guernsey/Channel Islands
Ramisch, Heinrich. - : Otto-Friedrich-Universität, 2021. : Bamberg, 2021. : "SPLIT", 2021
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94
Usage-Based Contact Linguistics : Effects of Frequency and Similarity in Language Contact
Backus, Ad; Hakimov, Nikolay. - : Brill, 2021. : Leiden, 2021
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95
Competing subjective resultative constructions in Yiddish and its co-territorial languages Polish and Russian
Birzer, Sandra. - : Otto-Friedrich-Universität, 2021. : Bamberg, 2021
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96
Els ètims catalans dins el Codex Cumanicus ; The Catalan etymologies in the Codex Cumanicus
Redondo, Jordi. - : Universitat d'Alacant. Departament de Filologia Catalana, 2021
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97
Anglicismos y formaciones derivadas en español actual ; Anglicisms and derivative formations in current Spanish
Rodríguez González, Félix. - : Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2021
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98
Geolinguistic variation of Hebridean Gaelic: the role of nominal morphology
Wilson, Charles; Wilson, Teàrlach. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2021
Abstract: This thesis investigates the geographical variation of inflectional markers used in noun phrases by speakers of Scottish Gaelic. I focus on the traditional vernacular and therefore the data represent the speech of older L1 speakers from one of the language’s heartlands: the Hebridean archipelago. I interviewed 41 speakers above the age of 50 from 18 locations on 10 islands and used dialectometric methods to analyse the data. This thesis contributes to Gaelic and linguistic research by providing: (1) an updated account of morphological and geographical variation in the traditional Gaelic vernacular; (2) further evaluation of quantitative analyses of morphology and macrolevel variation; (3) a theory of the hierarchy of inflectional markedness for Gaelic; and (4) a critical geolinguistic approach to the study of Gaelic and morphology applied to quantitative and qualitative data. The fieldwork component of this research consisted of a sociolinguistic interview, an elicitation task, and a questionnaire to collect contributors’ demographic background and linguistic attitudes. I interrogated the data with regression, cluster, and correlation analyses. The results from these analyses were visualized on maps. The results show that location is a powerful predictor of morphological variation. Locations, as a predictor, are explored through their demographic, topographic, and social context. Gaelic is a minority language under pressure from varieties of English and Scots, and therefore I also explore typological (e.g. contact-induced change) and sociolinguistic (e.g. hypercorrection) contact phenomena as explanations for morphological variation. This thesis presents evidence of considerable morphological variation within localized varieties of Gaelic. The results indicate that more northerly islands are generally more conservative in their treatment of nominal morphology, while more southerly islands are generally more innovative. These patterns correlate to some extent with the percentage of the local population that speak Gaelic, which suggests that conservative forms are supported in communities with greater densities of Gaelic speakers. Lewis is an exception in that it is the most northerly island, with some of the largest proportions of Gaelic speakers in the archipelago. Yet nominal morphology in Lewis cannot be classified as either ‘conservative’ or ‘innovative’. I argue that these patterns can be explained by segmental phonology, historical localisms, and typological phenomena (e.g. independent co-occurrence). Based on the findings from the statistical and critical analyses, I propose that: (1) typological and sociolinguistic phenomena (e.g. phonological variation and hypercorrection respectively) can account for variation; (2) variation can be explained by a hierarchy of markedness (in which more salient morphological markers are more prevalent); and (3) contact phenomena may be interacting with the hierarchy of markedness at both a linguistic and sociolinguistic level. The findings do not suggest morphosyntactic convergence from contact. Rather, much of the variation appears to be conditioned by the internal typological structures of Gaelic.
Keyword: consonant mutation; dialectology; dialectometry; geolinguistics; language contact; language variation; nominal morphology; Scottish Gaelic
URL: https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38432
https://doi.org/10.7488/era/1696
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99
Minorías que forman mayorías. Lo que niñas y mujeres nos cuentan sobre la historia del español de Barcelona en el siglo XIX
Garachana Camarero, Mar. - : Red Internacional CHARTA, 2021
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100
An Onomastic Banquet of Intercultural Relations ; Практики именования в межкультурном аспекте
Лавдэй, Л.; Loveday, L.. - : Издательство Уральского университета, 2021
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