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Language Formation by Adults: The Case of Sino-Russian Idiolects: Brill Studies in Language Contact and the Dynamics of Language, cartea 2

Autor Zygmunt Frajzyngier, Natalia Gurian, Sergei Karpenko
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 sep 2021
Chinese immigrants who settle in Russia’s Far East without formal instruction in the Russian language communicate with local Russians using Russian vocabulary. Each immigrant forms their language to communicate with Russians, not with family or other immigrants. The ‘single-generation languages’ that immigrants form are not replications or simplifications of Chinese or Russian. Grammatical systems formed by these speakers challenge some fundamental assumptions in early 21st-century linguistic theories. Grammatical systems of single-generation languages provide a unique window into how complex grammatical systems emerge, what are the first formal means of expression, and what are the first meanings expressed in grammatical systems. Given massive migrations in the contemporary world, single-generation languages are common, yet understudied, products of language contact.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004463295
ISBN-10: 9004463291
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill Studies in Language Contact and the Dynamics of Language


Cuprins

Acknowledgments
Abbreviations

1 Introduction
1The aim of the work
2The languages
3The importance of this study
4Previous research
5Sino-Russian idiolects are not ‘new varieties’
6Previous research on Sino-Russian
7Methodology
8The data
9A note about glossing convention

2 Phonology
1Previous scholarship on phonology
2Segmental structure, constraints and rules of Mandarin
3Segmental structure, constraints and rules of Russian
4The Sino-Russian segmental inventory
5Resolution of features and phonotactic constraints
6Phonotactics
7The dental sonorants: r, l and n distinction
8Stress assignment
9Conclusions and implications about phonology

3 Other formal means of coding
1Introduction to formal means
2The category ‘word’
3Pauses
4Linear orders as a coding means
5Free grammatical morphemes
6Conclusions regarding the formal means of coding in Sino-Russian

4 Lexicons of the Sino-Russian idiolects
1Aim of the chapter
2Lexical categories
3Number of words and number of different words in the texts
4Lexical convergence
5The choice of lexical items
6Conclusions about lexical items

5 The emergence of phrasal categories
1The importance of the chapter
2The emergence of the noun phrase
3The emergence of prepositional phrases
4Numeral phrases
5Verb phrases (lack of)
6The role of pauses in defining the phrasal structure
7Conclusion about the emergence of phrasal categories

6 The noun phrase
1The defining features and the formal means of coding within the noun phrase
2Inceptive coding of number
3Modification of one noun by another
4Modification by a pronoun
5Modification by a property concept
6Modification by a quantifier
7Conclusions about noun phrase

7 System of reference
1Introduction
2The formal coding means
3Introduction of new entities in discourse
4Coding an unknown member of a set
5Reference left to listener’s computation
6Switch reference within discourse: the function of pronouns
7Deixis
8Anaphora
9Unspecified entity
10Locative anaphora
11Conclusions about the system of reference

8 Antecedent-follow up relation
1The role of pauses
2The antecedent-comment distinction
3Utterance-internal pauses
4Discourse connection
5Non-propositional addressee and presentative function
6Conclusions

9 Modality
1Introduction
2Assertive modality
3Interrogative modality
4Negation
5Imperative: Expectation of the immediate implementation
6Obligation without the expectation of implementation
7Optative or purpose function
8Prohibitive modality
9Conclusions about modality

10 Aspectual system
1Aspectual systems in Russian and in Mandarin
2Punctual aspect
3Progressive aspect
4Conclusions about the emergence of aspect

11 Tense system
1Introduction
2Emergence of a future tense
3The emergence of the past tense
4Time in relation to another time
5Conclusion about tense system

12 Non-verbal predications
1Introduction
2The role of linear order in verbless predications
3Identificational predication
4Possessive predication
5Equational predication
6Attributive predication
7Quantifier as a predicate
8Existential predication
9Conclusions about verbless clauses

13 Relations between the verbal predicate and noun phrases
1Theoretical issues
2Position of the verbal predicate
3Omission of the predicate
4Clauses without noun phrases
5Number of arguments in a Sino-Russian clause
6The order of arguments in the clause
7The semantic role of the single noun phrase in a verbal clause
8Argument versus adjunct distinction
9Coding of semantic relations of noun phrases
10Locative complements
11Do the categories subject and object exist in Sino-Russian idiolects?
12Conclusions regarding the relations between the verbal predicate and noun phrases

14 Situating the Event in Here and Now

15 Adverbs of Manner
1The Importance of the Chapter
2Adverbs of Manner in Sino-Russian Idiolects
3Conclusions Concerning the Position of Adverbs

16 Comment clause
1The category comment clause
2The functions of the comment clause
3The emergence of the comment clause as a function
4Conclusions about the comment clause

17 Topicalization
1Introduction
2Topicalization through the use of prepositions
3Topicalization and the role of the pause
4Topicalization of noun phrases and prepositional phrases
5Topicalization through the use of the demonstrative ʹɛta
6Conclusions about topicalization

18 Relations between propositions
1Introduction
2Default propositional relation
3Unexpected follow-up
4Discourse connection
5Conclusions about relationship between propositions

19 Complementation
1Introduction
2Complements of verbs of saying
3Complements of cognitive verbs
4Modality of obligation and wish in complement clause
5Complements of the verbs of liking and loving
6Complements of verbs of perception
7Complements of volitional verbs
8Complements of cognitive verbs
9Purpose clause
10Reason clause
11Relative clause
12Conclusions about complementation and subordination

20 Comparative predications
1Introduction
2Equal comparison
3Unequal comparison
4Conclusions about comparative constructions

21 Summary and implications
1The scope of the chapter
2The coding means
3The functions
4Implications for linguistic theory and methodology
5Understanding the Sino-Russian idiolects
6Sino-Russian idiolects and language contact
7The grammar formation process
8Lexical items and lexical categories
9Open questions

22 Sample of texts
1Boris: Bread and sausage
2Ivan
3Lida
4Sveta about her work
5Sveta about the New Year celebration
6Sveta about food
7Sveta about Russians
8Sveta about food
9Anonymous
10Nina
11Sveta ‘Wolf and rabbit’
12Lyuda
13Slava
14Egor
15Andrey
16Konstantin. Narration of the ‘Pear story’.
17Fedya about himself
18Anna about herself
19Anna about language learning
20Anna’s Pear Story

References
Index

Notă biografică

Zygmunt Frajzyngier, Ph.D. (1968), University of Warsaw, is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Colorado in Boulder. He has published many books on African languages and syntax and semantics from a cross-linguistic perspective. Most recently he published, with Marielle Butters, The emergence of grammatical functions (2020, Oxford University Press).
Natalia Gurian, Ph.D. (2009), Lomonosov Moscow State University, Institute of Asian and African Studies, is Associate Professor at the Department of Education in Oriental Languages and Oriental Studies, School of Education, Far Eastern Federal University (Russia).
Sergei Karpenko, Ph.D. (2007), Barnaul State Pedagogical University, is Associate Professor at Department of Romance and German Languages, Far Eastern Federal University (Russia).

Recent publication by the authors together: Frajzyngier, Zygmunt; Natalia Gurian; and Sergei Karpenko (2020). Language contact: Sino-Russian in Handbook of language contact, 2nd ed. R. Hickey (ed.). Wiley Online Library, pp. 689-715.