Affiliation:
1. Free University of Bozen-Bolzano Bozen-Bolzano Italy
2. University of Turin Turin Italy
Abstract
Abstract
The variety of Italian spoken in Bolzano (South Tyrol) represents a singular case in Italy, because it is not the result of a long-term contact between standard and Italo-Romance dialects but rather the outcome of a process of levelling and koineization. In such sociolinguistic scenario, it is interesting to study phonological variability in Bolzano Italian with the aim of understanding which language varieties have possibly played a role as models from a sociolinguistic point of view. The purpose of our exploratory study is to characterize this variety within the spectrum of variation between the standard and the regional norm. In our analysis, we will focus on the set of mid vowels as a window to understand which variety of Italian BI most closely resembles. Through a corpus-based analysis, we will investigate the phonological distribution of mid vowels (for both Italian and Tyrolean speakers), in order to explore whether it can be explained on the basis of a contextual or a lexical distribution.
Reference42 articles.
1. Auer, Peter. 2005. Europe’s sociolinguistic unity, or: A typology of European dialect/standard constellations. In Nicole Delbecque, Johan van der Auwera & Dirk Geeraerts (eds.), Perspectives on variation: Sociolinguistic, historical, comparative, 7–42. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
2. Berruto, Gaetano. 2012. Sociolinguistica dell’italiano contemporaneo. Roma: Carocci.
3. Bertinetto, Pier Marco & Michele Loporcaro. 2005. The sound pattern of Standard Italian, as compared with the varieties spoken in Florence, Milan and Rome. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 35(2). 131–151.
4. Bruni, Francesco (ed.). 1992. L’italiano nelle regioni. Lingua nazionale e identità regionali. Torino: UTET.
5. Calamai, Silvia. 2017. Tuscan between standard and vernacular: A sociophonetic perspective. In Massimo Cerruti, Claudia Crocco & Stefania Marzo (eds.), Towards a New Standard, 213–241. Berlin, Germany: De Gruyter.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献