Language Mixing in American Norwegian Noun Phrases

被引:3
|
作者
Riksem, Brita Ramsevik [1 ]
机构
[1] Norwegian Univ Sci & Technol NTNU, Trondheim, Norway
关键词
American Norwegian; exoskeletal analysis; language mixing; morphosyntax; noun phrase;
D O I
10.1163/19552629-01103005
中图分类号
H [语言、文字];
学科分类号
05 ;
摘要
This article investigates the morphosyntax of American Norwegian noun phrases that show mixing between Norwegian and English and proposes a formal analysis of these. The data show a distinct pattern characterized by English content items occurring together with Norwegian functional material such as determiners and suffixes. In the article, it will be argued that an exoskeletal approach to grammar is ideally suited to capture this empirical pattern. This framework crucially separates the realization of functional and non-functional terminals in an abstract, syntactic structure. Insertion of functional exponents is restricted by feature matching, whereas insertion into nonfunctional terminals is radically less restrictive. English exponents for noun stems are thus easily inserted into open positions in the structure, whereas functional exponents are typically drawn from Norwegian, as these are better matches to feature bundles comprising definiteness, number, and gender. In addition to the typical mixing pattern, the article addresses an unexpected empirical phenomenon, the occurrence of the English plural -s, and proposes a possible analysis for this using the exoskeletal framework. The formal analysis of American Norwegian noun phrases also exemplifies how an exoskeletal approach complies with the ideal of a Null theory of language mixing.
引用
收藏
页码:481 / 524
页数:44
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Possession in sentences and noun phrases
    Ouhalla, J
    [J]. RESEARCH IN AFROASIATIC GRAMMAR, 2000, 202 : 221 - 242
  • [22] Uniqueness in Definite Noun Phrases
    Craige Roberts
    [J]. Linguistics and Philosophy, 2003, 26 : 287 - 350
  • [23] REFERENTIALITY IN SPANISH NOUN PHRASES
    ROJAS, N
    [J]. LANGUAGE, 1977, 53 (01) : 61 - 69
  • [24] SPATIAL REPRESENTATION OF NOUN PHRASES
    DEGERMAN, R
    MATHER, RS
    [J]. JOURNAL OF VERBAL LEARNING AND VERBAL BEHAVIOR, 1972, 11 (01): : 66 - &
  • [25] Uniqueness in definite noun phrases
    Roberts, C
    [J]. LINGUISTICS AND PHILOSOPHY, 2003, 26 (03) : 287 - 350
  • [26] Noun Phrases in Vafs Dialect
    Mirak, Fatemeh Moosavi
    Safavizadeh, Nasrin
    [J]. LIFE SCIENCE JOURNAL-ACTA ZHENGZHOU UNIVERSITY OVERSEAS EDITION, 2012, 9 (04): : 1698 - 1703
  • [27] THE INTERPRETATION OF NOUN PHRASES WITH CONTEXTUALLY RELATIONAL HEAD NOUN
    Gusatu, Ionela
    [J]. DISCOURSE AS A FORM OF MULTICULTURALISM IN LITERATURE AND COMMUNICATION - LANGUAGE AND DISCOURSE, 2015, : 937 - 941
  • [28] THE INTERPRETATION OF NOUN PHRASES WITH INHERENT RELATIONAL HEAD NOUN
    Gusatu, Ionela
    Sfetea, Roxana
    [J]. DISCOURSE AS A FORM OF MULTICULTURALISM IN LITERATURE AND COMMUNICATION - LANGUAGE AND DISCOURSE, 2015, : 223 - 228
  • [29] Focus and weak noun phrases
    Herburger E.
    [J]. Natural Language Semantics, 1997, 5 (1) : 53 - 78
  • [30] FOCUS CONSTRUCTIONS AS NOUN PHRASES
    AWOBULUYI, O
    [J]. LINGUISTIC ANALYSIS, 1978, 4 (02): : 93 - 114