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Situative strategies and constructions in European languages ...
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Towards reconstructing a Proto-Tivoid numeral classifier system ...
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Historical development and contemporary usage of discourse structuring elements based on verba dicendi in Croatian
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Voice in Istanbul Greek: A Language Contact Explanation
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In: Proceedings of the Workshop on Turkic and Languages in Contact with Turkic; Vol 6 (2021); 5059 ; 2641-3485 (2022)
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Abstract:
The aim of this research is analyzing Voice-related constructions in Istanbul Greek, namely anticausative and passive predicates, and addressing the synchronic differences between the Istanbul dialect and Standard Greek in terms of these constructions from a language-contact perspective. As a morphosyntactic analysis of Istanbul Greek, this research is the first of its kind, and is based on data collected from native speakers, namely the Istanbul Greeks. Voice-related constructions in Greek involve regular use of non-active morphology. Hence, the empirical domain of this research covers the use of non-active morphology in Istanbul Greek. My hypothesis is that the markedness of Istanbul Greek anticausatives is correlated with the markedness of their Turkish counterparts, contrary to Standard Greek. By markedness, I refer to the existence of an overt exponent for the binary morphological distinction between active and non-active forms. I claim that language contact between Istanbul Greek and Turkish is a possible reason for the dialectal differences between Istanbul Greek and Standard Greek in terms of the marking of Voice-related constructions.In terms of setting the theoretical background for Voice-related constructions in Standard Greek, I utilized Alexiadou et al.’s (2015) work about Standard Greek marked/unmarked anticausatives. I also collected data on Standard Greek from ten speakers, which diverged from Alexiadou et al.’s (2015) explanation of Voice-related constructions in the standard dialect. For setting the linguistic background on Istanbul Greek, I utilized the study of Pandelidis (2019). To offer a morphosyntactic explanation for the dialectal differences observed in the Istanbul Greek data, I utilized language contact concepts such as interference (Thomason 2003), convergence (Clyne 2003), valency-copying (Grossman and Witzlack-Makarevich 2019), morphophonological explanations such as the presence vs. absence of an augment, and Haspelmath’s (1993) spontaneity scale, among others.
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Keyword:
anticausatives; Greek; Istanbul Greek; Language Contact; markedness; morphosyntax; non-active morphology; Turkish; Voice
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URL: http://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/tu/article/view/5059 https://doi.org/10.3765/ptu.v6i1.5059
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Prosodic segmentation and cross-linguistic comparison in CorpAfroAs and CorTypo: Corpus-driven and corpus-based approaches
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In: ISSN: 1934-5275 ; EISSN: 1934-5275 ; Language Documentation & Conservation ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03344410 ; Language Documentation & Conservation, University of Hawaiʻi Press In press (2021)
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Universals of Linguistic Idiosyncrasy in Multilingual Computational Linguistics ; Universals of Linguistic Idiosyncrasy in Multilingual Computational Linguistics: Dagstuhl Seminar 21351
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In: Universals of Linguistic Idiosyncrasy in Multilingual Computational Linguistics ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03507948 ; Universals of Linguistic Idiosyncrasy in Multilingual Computational Linguistics, Aug 2021, pp.89--138, 2021, 2192-5283. ⟨10.4230/DagRep.11.7.89⟩ ; https://gitlab.com/unlid/dagstuhl-seminar/-/wikis/home (2021)
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Universals of Linguistic Idiosyncrasy in Multilingual Computational Linguistics (Dagstuhl Seminar 21351)
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Managing AUTOTYP Data: Design Principles and Implementation ...
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Managing AUTOTYP Data: Design Principles and Implementation ...
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Coordination without grammar-internal feature resolution ...
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Estonian and Finnish show that hybrid agreement is structural (WCCFL proceedings paper) ...
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Using verb morphology to predict subject number in L1 and L2 sentence processing: A visual-world eye-tracking experiment
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In: Journal of the European Second Language Association; Vol 5, No 1 (2021); 115–132 ; 2399-9101 (2021)
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Me, mi, my: Innovation and variability in heritage speakers’ knowledge of inalienable possession
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In: Glossa: a journal of general linguistics; Vol 6, No 1 (2021); 31 ; 2397-1835 (2021)
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Universals of Linguistic Idiosyncrasy in Multilingual Computational Linguistics (Dagstuhl Seminar 21351) ...
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Where Are the Goalposts? Generational Change in the Use of Grammatical Gender in Irish
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In: Languages ; Volume 6 ; Issue 1 (2021)
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Overlapping but Language-Specific Mechanisms in Morphosyntactic Processing in Highly Competent L2 Acquired at School Entry: fMRI Evidence From an Alternating Language Switching Task
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