On “free” grammatical variation in a mixed lect: Clitic placement in Cypriot Greek

Author:

Grohmann Kleanthes K.1,Kambanaros Maria2,Leivada Evelina3,Pavlou Natalia1

Affiliation:

1. Department of English Studies , University of Cyprus , 75 Kallipoleos, P. O. Box 20537 , Nicosia , Cyprus

2. UniSA Allied Health & Human Performance , University of South Australia , Adelaide , Australia

3. Department of English and German Studies , Universitat Rovira i Virgili , Tarragona , Spain

Abstract

Abstract Variation involving a switch between pre- and post-verbal placement of pronominal object clitics in a single syntactic environment within a language is unexpected. The rationale why this would not be expected is clear: Languages pattern as either proclitic or enclitic with respect to object clitic placement, possibly allowing one or the other option across different syntactic environments. We provide an overview of our research from data collected in Cyprus, related to the development and use of pronominal object clitics for child populations and adult speakers that are bilectal in Cypriot and Standard Modern Greek. While it has been shown that the tested bilectal populations receive exposure to more than one distinct grammar, including mixed grammars with optional choices for clitic placement, an important question remains unaddressed: Is variation really “free” across all speakers or are there universally reliable predictors (such as gender, age, or level of education) that mediate a consistent use of either the standard or the dialect? Combining insights from targeted elicitation tasks administered to different groups, a corpus of spontaneous speech, and an extensive literature review, we show the weakness of such purported predictors and support a claim of free variation.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference53 articles.

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2. Arvaniti, Amalia. 2010. Linguistic practices in Cyprus and the emergence of Cypriot Standard Greek. Mediterranean Language Review 17. 15–45.

3. Auer, Peter. 1999. From code-switching via language mixing to fused lects toward a dynamic typology of bilingual speech. International Journal of Bilingualism 3. 309–332.

4. Ayiomamitou, Ioli & Androula Yiakoumetti. 2017. Skewed sociolinguistic awareness of a native non-standard dialect: Evidence from the Cypriot Greek writing of Greek Cypriot students. Frontiers in Psychology 8. 2017. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.02017.

5. Boyd, Jeremy Kenyon. 2007. Comparatively speaking: A psycholinguistic study of optionality in grammar. San Diego, CA: University of California dissertation.

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