六种北斯堪的纳维亚语言的性别分配:变异和变化模式

IF 0.4 3区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS Journal of Germanic Linguistics Pub Date : 2021-09-01 DOI:10.1017/S1470542720000173
Briana Van Epps, G. Carling, Y. Sapir
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引用次数: 2

摘要

这项研究涉及六个具有三个性别系统的北斯堪的纳维亚品种的性别分配:古挪威语、挪威语(尼诺斯克)、古瑞典语、尼斯文斯卡语、詹特兰语和埃尔夫达利安语。围绕性别变异和变化,我们调查了各种因素在性别变化中的作用。以当代瑞典语变体Jamtlanic和Elfdalian为基础,我们比较了其他北斯堪的纳维亚语言的性别分配,追溯到古挪威语的演变。数据由来自所有六种语言的1300个概念组成,这些概念编码为同源性、性别、形态和语义变化。我们的统计分析表明,性别变化的最重要因素是古挪威语弱/强屈折、古挪威语性别、有生命/无生命的区分、词频和贷款状态。从古挪威语到现代语言,由于词尾的普遍缺失,语音分配原则往往会减弱。女性词汇更容易受到性别变化的影响,即使在我们的研究中坚持三性体系的变体中,女性词汇也有失去女性的趋势。此外,频率与性别不稳定显著相关。在语义学中,只有有生命/无生命的区别才能显著地预测性别分配和稳定性。总的来说,我们的研究证实了日耳曼语斯堪的纳维亚分支中女性性别的衰退。
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Gender Assignment in Six North Scandinavian Languages: Patterns of Variation and Change
This study addresses gender assignment in six North Scandinavian varieties with a three-gender system: Old Norse, Norwegian (Nynorsk), Old Swedish, Nysvenska, Jamtlandic, and Elfdalian. Focusing on gender variation and change, we investigate the role of various factors in gender change. Using the contemporary Swedish varieties Jamtlandic and Elfdalian as a basis, we compare gender assignment in other North Scandinavian languages, tracing the evolution back to Old Norse. The data consist of 1,300 concepts from all six languages coded for cognacy, gender, and morphological and semantic variation. Our statistical analysis shows that the most important factors in gender change are the Old Norse weak/strong inflection, Old Norse gender, animate/inanimate distinction, word frequency, and loan status. From Old Norse to modern languages, phonological assignment principles tend to weaken, due to the general loss of word-final endings. Feminine words are more susceptible to changing gender, and the tendency to lose the feminine is noticeable even in the varieties in our study upholding the three-gender system. Further, frequency is significantly correlated with unstable gender. In semantics, only the animate/inanimate distinction signifi-cantly predicts gender assignment and stability. In general, our study confirms the decay of the feminine gender in the Scandinavian branch of Germanic.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
20.00%
发文量
17
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