Affiliation:
1. The University of Michigan
Abstract
Abstract
In this paper, I assume a grammatical approach to codeswitching (MacSwan,
2012), which predicts a ban on codeswitching below the head level. Previous literature has analyzed this ban largely at
the word-level, terming it a ban on word-internal codeswitching. In this paper I argue that the said ban can also
be extended from the lexical domain to certain syntactic domains that act as one word. I test MacSwan’s theory in the context of
codeswitching within construct state nominals, a genitive construction prevalent in Semitic languages. The construct state is
particularly relevant for discussions on the syntax-phonology interface within codeswitching because it is a complex and
productive syntactic structure that is mapped onto one word. The results of an acceptability judgment experiment show lowered
acceptability for sentences where a codeswitch occurred within a construct state nominal vs. sentences where the codeswitch
occurred outside of a construct state nominal. The lowered acceptability for such codeswitched judgments suggests that the ban on
word-internal codeswitching is not in fact limited to words but can be extended to complex syntactic units that
prosodically function as one word.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics