Affiliation:
1. University of New Mexico , Albuquerque , NM , USA
Abstract
Abstract
The limited research on bilinguals’ demonstratives suggests that bilingualism may result in a reduced number of demonstrative forms in bilinguals’ linguistic systems as well as a shift in the factors that constrain demonstrative usage. The current study investigates Spanish nominal demonstrative use among Spanish-speaking monolingual adults in Mexico and two groups of Spanish–English bilingual adults in New Mexico: Adult Arrivals, who were born and raised in a Spanish-speaking country, and U.S. Raised bilinguals, who were born in the U.S. or arrived by age seven. Proximal demonstratives este/esta ‘this’ and medial demonstratives ese/esa ‘that’ were elicited using a puzzle task. All groups varied between este/esta and ese/esa. The monolinguals were likelier than the bilinguals to produce ese/esa when referring to referents farther from themselves and closer to the addressee. Whereas the monolinguals and Adult Arrivals tended to produce este/esta rather than ese/esa when the experimenter selected the incorrect referent, thereby creating a misunderstanding, the U.S. Raised bilinguals showed the opposite trend. The findings are interpreted in the context of typological research indicating that distance between the addressee and the referent impacts demonstrative usage in Spanish but not English. It is hypothesized that increased exposure to English may correspond to reduced attention to the addressee when choosing which demonstrative to use.
Reference40 articles.
1. Alonso, Martin. 1968. Gramática del español contemporáneo. Madrid: Guadarrama.
2. Anderson, Stephen R. & Edward L. Keenan. 1985. Deixis. In Timothy Shopen (ed.), Language typology and syntactic description, vol. 3, 259–308. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
3. Bates, Douglas, Martin Maechler, Bolker Ben & Steve Walker. 2015. Fitting linear mixed-effects models using lme4. Journal of Statistical Software 67(1). 1–48. https://doi.org/10.18637/jss.v067.i01.
4. Birdsong, David, Libby M. Gertken & Mark Amengual. 2012. Bilingual language profile: An easy-to-use instrument to assess bilingualism. Austin, TX: COERLL, University of Texas at Austin.
5. Caldano, Michela & Kenny R. Coventry. 2019. Spatial demonstratives and perceptual space: To reach or not to reach? Cognition 191. 103989. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2019.06.001.