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lun. 26/06/2023 Réunion Interne
Assemblée Générale au vert
9h30 à 17h
L'Orangerie

L'assemblée générale regroupe tous les membres du laboratoire et a pour but d'informer et d'échanger. On y découvre des informations générales sur le laboratoire et son environnement, le travail des ingénieurs et techniciens, les axes de recherche, et la cellule Communication. La présence de tous est obligatoire. L'assemblé générale sera suivie par un buffet convivial.


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lun. 03/07/2023 [Séminaire DiLiS] Are speakers aware of contact-induced grammatical variation? A case study of reflexivity in Mano and Kpelle
14-15h30
MSH-LSE, salle Frossard
Conférence de :
  • Maria Khachaturyan (University of Helsinki)

dans le cadre DILIS

Speaker

Maria Khachaturyan, University of Helsinki.

Link: https://cnrs.zoom.us/j/93784174724?pwd=V3dVRTNNUFJUY1NONW9IRml1TUFNQT09

Abstract

It is commonly assumed in language contact studies that languages spoken by multilinguals become more like one another, which leads to long-term convergence between the languages. This does not lead to a sweeping linguistic uniformity, however: there is still an incredible diversity across the world’s languages. In this talk, I present my ongoing study of language contact between the Mano and the Kpelle languages of Guinea and show how, despite the potential of convergence, languages remain distinct. Language dominance seems to play a decisive role in the extent of cross-linguistic influence, which is the strongest in individuals born in monolingual Kpelle families and residing in Kpelle-dominant settings. One unexpected result, however, is that speakers residing in a balanced bilingual setting pattern together with speakers residing in a Mano setting, regardless of their family language, contradicting frequent claims of language convergence in communities in contact. Another surprising finding is that speaker’s comprehension and expectations of form-to-meaning correspondence are strongly affected by the way language is spoken around them, which is an indication of (perhaps, implicit) awareness of sociolinguistic variation. I further discuss the implications of both these findings for the studies of social meaning of grammatical variation.


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