Affiliation:
1. New York University, 10 Washington Pl. New York
Abstract
The traditional focus of variationist sociolinguistic research is the patterning of language variation at the level of the community, which individual language users are said to learn and reproduce (Labov 1972; 2012). In this paper, I observe that, although members of a speech community may all have learned the same grammar of a sociolinguistic variable, they may nonetheless produce that variable in ways which obscure this. This “perturbation,” I argue, is epiphenomenal, stemming from at least two possible sources: individual differences in mental representations, and individual differences in speech production planning. Moreover, I demonstrate that these differences are not only inter-individual; they can also be intra-individual, such that speakers may undergo age-grading which disrupts their patterning of a variable from how they previously produced it. I ask whether these individual differences may give rise to changes in constraints in the same way that individual differences can lead to sound change. The paper concludes with a call for more research that integrates sociolinguistic, formal, and psycholinguistic approaches to the study of language variation and change.
Publisher
Open Library of the Humanities
Reference90 articles.
1. Variability in American English s-retraction suggests a solution to the actuation problem;Baker, AdamDiana ArchangeliJeff Mielke;Language Variation and Change,2011
2. TD-deletion in British English: New evidence for the long lost morphological effect;Baranowski, MaciejDanielle Turton;Paper to appear in Language Variation and Change
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