A corpus-driven description of when-adverbial in Nigerian and British Englishes

Author:

Akinlotan Mayowa1

Affiliation:

1. Department of English Language and Linguistics , Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt , Universitätsallee 1, Ehemalige Orangerie eO 008-1, 85072 Eichstätt , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Syntactic alternation allows us to understand how structural variation, including crucial factors relevant to their meaning and interpretation, operates linguistic varieties. Empirical evidence from such syntactic alternation study can provide insights into how new varieties differ from the established ones. The present study aims at increasing contributions that show the nature of syntactic alternation from new Englishes such as Nigerian English, and how they differ from established varieties such as British English. Taking when adverbial construction in Nigerian English as a reference point (When Trump realised his reelection loss, he changed his political expectations versus Trump changed his political expectations when he realised his reelection loss), the study shows the extent to which previously tested factors influence the ordering of the construction and how they differ from findings reported in British English. Relying on corpus data, together with descriptive distributional analysis, the study shows that, unlike British English in which functional and cognitive factors strongly influence structural patterning, functional factors outweigh cognitive factors in Nigerian English.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Linguistics and Language,History

Reference33 articles.

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3. Akinlotan, Mayowa & Akande Akinmande. 2019. Dative alternation in Nigerian English: A corpus-based approach. Glottotheory: An International Journal of Theoretical Linguistics 10(1–2). 103–125.

4. Akinlotan, Mayowa & Alex Housen. 2017. Noun phrase complexity in Nigerian English: Syntactic function and length outweigh genre in predicting noun phrase complexity. English Today 33(3). 31–38. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0266078416000626.

5. Akinlotan, Mayowa. 2016. Determiner number (dis) agreement in Nigerian English. In Moreno Antonio Ortiz & Chantal Hernandez-Perez (eds.), CICL 2016 EPic series in language and linguistics 1, 1–8. Malaga: Spanish Association for Corpus Linguistcs (AELINCO). Avaiable at: https://easychair.org/publications/volume/CILC2016.

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