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This study investigates cross-language differences in pitch range and variation in four languages from two language groups: English and German (Germanic) and Bulgarian and Polish (Slavic). The analysis is based on large multi-speaker corpora (48 speakers for Polish, 60 for each of the other three languages). Linear mixed models were computed that include various distributional measures of pitch level, span and variation, revealing characteristic differences across languages and between language groups. A classification experiment based on the relevant parameter measures (span, kurtosis and skewness values for pitch distributions for each speaker) succeeded in separating the language groups.
This study presents the results of a large-scale comparison of various measures of pitch range and pitch variation in two Slavic (Bulgarian and Polish) and two Germanic (German and British English) languages. The productions of twenty-two speakers per language (eleven male and eleven female) in two different tasks (read passages and number sets) are compared. Significant differences between the language groups are found: German and English speakers use lower pitch maxima, narrower pitch span, and generally less variable pitch than Bulgarian and Polish speakers. These findings support the hypothesis that inguistic communities tend to be characterized by particular pitch profiles.
Based on specific linguistic landmarks in the speech signal, this study investigates pitch level and pitch span differences in English, German, Bulgarian and Polish. The analysis is based on 22 speakers per language (11 males and 11 females). Linear mixed models were computed that include various linguistic measures of pitch level and span, revealing characteristic differences across languages and between language groups. Pitch level appeared to have significantly higher values for the female speakers in the Slavic than the Germanic group. The male speakers showed slightly different results, with only the Polish speakers displaying significantly higher mean values for pitch level than the German males. Overall, the results show that the Slavic speakers tend to have a wider pitch span than the German speakers. But for the linguistic measure, namely for span between the initial peaks and the non-prominent valleys, we only find the difference between Polish and German speakers. We found a flatter intonation contour in German than in Polish, Bulgarian and English male and female speakers and differences in the frequency of the landmarks between languages. Concerning “speaker liveliness” we found that the speakers from the Slavic group are significantly livelier than the speakers from the Germanic group.
Vorgestellt werden kontrastive Analysen zur Besetzung und Häufigkeitsverteilung von Vorfeldern im Deutschen und ihren französischen, italienischen, norwegischen, polnischen und ungarischen Äquivalenten in morphosyntaktisch annotierten Wikipedia-Korpora. Im Rahmen der Untersuchung wurden mit korpusanalytischen Methoden quantitative Zusammenhänge bei den sprachspezifischen Ausprägungen von Vorfeldern nachgewiesen, die im Einklang mit typischen Struktureigenschaften der untersuchten Kontrastsprachen stehen. Die Ergebnisse legen aber nahe, dass die untersuchten Vorfeldstrukturen ‒ trotz der beträchtlichen Größe und thematischen Vielfalt der Wikipedia-Korpora ‒ nicht hinreichend repräsentativ sind, um uneingeschränkt Rückschlüsse auf allgemeine Struktureigenschaften der sechs Kontrastsprachen zu ziehen. Hierfür verantwortlich ist insbesondere die ausgeprägte Textsortenspezifizität der Mediengattung (Online-)Enzyklopädie, was mithilfe weiterer Vergleichskorpora aufgezeigt werden konnte.
Die Flexionsmorphologie des Deutschen ist ein zentraler Forschungsgegenstand des europäischen Forschungsnetzwerks EuroGr@mm, dessen Erschließung für Forschung und Lehre seit Anfang 2007 vorangetrieben wird. Das europäische Projekt hatte sich zur Aufgabe gemacht, diesen grammatischen Themenbereich aus französischer, italienischer, norwegischer, polnischer und ungarischer Perspektive kontrastiv zu beleuchten. Die ersten Ergebnisse wurden nun in Form von didaktisch aufbereiteten Wissenseinheiten auf der Lemplattform ProGr@mm kontrastiv veröffentlicht.
In many European languages, propositional arguments (PAs) can be realized as different types of structures. Cross-linguistically, complex structures with PAs show a systematic correlation between the strength of the semantic bond and the syntactic union (cf. Givón 2001; Wurmbrand/Lohninger 2023). Also, different languages show similarities with respect to the (lexical) licensing of different PAs (cf. Noonan 1985; Givón 2001; Cristofaro 2003 on different predicate types). However, on a more fine-grained level, a variation across languages can be observed both with respect to the syntactic-semantic properties of PAs as well as to their licensing and usage. This presentation takes a multi-contrastive view of different types of PAs as syntactic subjects and objects by looking at five European languages: EN, DE, IT, PL and HU. Our goal is to identify the parameters of variation in the clausal domain with PAs and by this to contribute to a better understanding of the individual language systems on the one hand and the nature of the linguistic variation in the clausal domain on the other hand. Phenomena and Methodology: We investigate the following types of PAs: direct object (DO) clauses (1), prepositional object (PO) clauses (2), subject clauses (3), and nominalizations (4, 5). Additionally, we discuss clause union phenomena (6, 7). The analyzed parameters include among others finiteness, linear position of the PA, (non) presence of a correlative element, (non) presence of a complementizer, lexical-semantic class of the embedding verb. The phenomena are analyzed based on corpus data (using mono- and multilingual corpora), experimental data (acceptability judgement surveys) or introspective data.
CoMParS is a resource under construction in the context of the long-term project German Grammar in European Comparison (GDE) at the IDS Mannheim. The principal goal of GDE is to create a novel contrastive grammar of German against the background of other European languages. Alongside German, which is the central focus, the core languages for comparison are English, French, Hungarian and Polish, representing different typological classes. Unlike traditional contrastive grammars available for German, which usually cover language pairs and are based on formal grammatical categories, the new GDE grammar is developed in the spirit of functionalist typology. This implies that, instead of formal criteria, cognitively motivated functional domains in terms of Givón (1984) are used as tertia comparationis. The purpose of CoMParS is to document the empirical basis of the theoretical assumptions of GDE-V and to illustrate the otherwise rather abstract content of grammar books by as many as possible naturally occurring and adequately presented multilingual examples, including information on their use in specific contexts and registers. These examples come from existing parallel corpora, and our presentation will focus on the legal aspects and consequences of this choice of language data.
In diesem Beitrag befassen wir uns mit Aspekten der textuellen Verwendung von Possessiva im Deutschen, im Polnischen und im Ungarischen, die wir aus ihrem jeweiligen Formensystem und dessen Einbettung in das entsprechende Sprachsystem zu erklären suchen. Im Mittelpunkt des Beitrags stehen Possessiva mit anaphorischen Bezügen, die in deutsch-, polnisch- und ungarischsprachigen Texten die Possessiva der 3. Person betreffen. Wir widmen uns insbesondere folgenden drei Fragen: (i) Welcher Formunterscheidungen bedienen sich das Deutsche, das Polnische und das Ungarische beim Gebrauch der Possessiva, um die Identifikation des richtigen Bezugsausdrucks im Text zu ermöglichen? (ii) Wie lassen sich die jeweiligen Formentscheidungen in den betreffenden Kontexten erklären? (iii) Welche textuelle Wirkung wird durch die Wahl der jeweiligen Formen erreicht? Diese Fragen werden auf Grund der durchgeführten empirischen Paralleltextanalysen beantwortet.
Die adnominalen (attributiven) Verwendungsmöglichkeiten von temporalen und lokalen Adverbien im Deutschen werden untersucht und mit denen aus vier anderen europäischen Nachbarsprachen – Englisch, Französisch, Polnisch, Ungarisch – verglichen. Gezeigt wird, wie diese Sprachen unterschiedliche Anbindungsstrategien nutzen, um Adverbien in attributiver Funktion einsetzen zu können. Drei solcher Strategien werden unterschieden: Juxtaposition, Adjektivierung und formale Verknüpfung. Die Anbindungsstrategien sind in den Vergleichssprachen unterschiedlich verteilt und in unterschiedlichem Maße dominant. Verfügt eine Sprache über zwei oder mehr Anbindungsstrategien, so können diese in Abhängigkeit von der semantischen Teilklasse des Attributs mit verschiedenen semantischen Beschränkungen und Effekten korreliert sein. Diese bezeichnen wir als temporale bzw. lokale Kompatibilität, Persistenz und Oppositivität. Es lassen sich z.T. übereinzelsprachlich bestimmte Form-Funktions-Korrelationen zwischen Anbindungsstrategien und semantischen Beschränkungen bzw. Effekten feststellen. So können adjektivische und formal verknüpfte Attribute Persistenz und Oppositivität kodieren, juxtaponierte dagegen grundsätzlich nicht.
Polnisch
(2003)
The present paper reports two acceptability-rating experiments and a supporting corpus study for Polish that tested the acceptability and frequency of five verb classes (WATCH, SEE, HATE, KNOW, EXHIBIT), entailing different sets of agentivity features, in different syntactic constructions: a) the personal passive (e.g. zachód słońca był oglądany ‘the sunset was watched’), b) the impersonal -no/-to construction (e.g. oglądano zachód słońca ‘people/they/one watched the sunset’), and c) the personal active construction (e.g. niektórzy oglądali zachód słońca ‘some (people) watched the sunset’). We asked whether acceptability ratings would show identical acceptability clines across constructions affected by agentivity, as predicted from Dowty’s (1991) prototype account of semantic roles with feature accumulation as its central mechanism, or whether clines would vary depending on syntactic construction, as predicted from Himmelmann & Primus’ (2015) prominence account that uses feature weighting to describe role-related effects. In contrasting the applicability of these two accounts, we also investigated whether previous research findings from German replicate in Polish, thereby revealing cross-linguistic stability or variation. Our results show that the five verb classes yield different acceptability clines in all three Polish constructions and that the clines for Polish and German passives show cross-linguistic variation. This pattern cannot be explained by role prototypicality, so that the experiments provide further evidence for the prominence account of role-related effects in sentence interpretation. Moreover, our data suggest that experiencer verbs interact differently with the animacy of the subject referent, yielding different results for perception verbs (SEE), emotion verbs (HATE), and cognition verbs (KNOW).
In this article we examine moments in which parents or other caregivers overtly invoke rules during episodes in which they take issue with, intervene against, and try to change a child’s ongoing behavior or action(s). Drawing on interactional data from four different languages (English, Finnish, German, Polish) and using Conversation Analytic methods, we first illustrate the variety of ways in which parents may use such overt rule invocations as part of their behavior modification attempts, showing them to be functionally versatile interactional objects. Their interactional flexibility notwithstanding, we find that parents typically invoke rules when, in the course of the intervention episode, they encounter trouble with achieving an acceptable compliant outcome. To get at the distinct import of rule formulations in this context, we then compare them to two sequential alternatives: parental expressions of an experienced negative affective state, and parental threats. While the former emphasize aspects of social solidarity, the latter seek to enforce compliance by foregrounding a power asymmetry between the parent and the child. Rule formulations, by contrast, are designedly impersonal and appear to be directed at what the parents construe as shortcomings in common-sense practical reasoning on the child’s part. Reflexively, the child is thereby cast as not having properly applied common-sense ‘practical reason’ when engaging in what is treated as the problematic behavior or action. Overt rule invocations can, therefore, be understood as indexical appeals to practical reason.
It is a ubiquitous phenomenon of everyday interaction that participants confront their co-participants for behaviour that they assess as undesirable or in some other way untoward. In a set of video data of informal interaction from the PECII corpus (Parallel European Corpus of Informal Interaction), cases of such sanctions have been collected in English, German, Italian and Polish data. This study presents work in progress and focuses on interrogatively formatted sanctions, in particular on non-polar interrogatives. It has already been shown that interrogatives can do much more than ask questions (Huddleston 1994). They can also function as directives (Lindström et al. 2017) or, more specifically, as requests (Curl/Drew 2008), as invitations (Margutti/Galatolo 2018) or reproaches (Klattenberg 2021), among others. What makes them interesting for cross-linguistic comparison is that the four languages that are considered provide different morphological and (morpho-)syntactical ressources for the realization of interrogative phrases. For example, German provides the option of building in the modal particle denn that reveals a previous lack of clarity and obliges the co-participant(s) to deliver the missing information (Deppermann 2009). Of course, the other three languages have modal particles, too (e.g. allora in Italian or though in English), but they do not seem to convey the same semantic and interactional qualities as denn. From an interactional point of view, one could think that interrogatives are a typical and effective way of solliciting accounts, since formally they open up a conditionally relevant space for an answer or a
reaction. But as the data shows, this does not guarantee that they are actually responded to. Another relevant aspect in the context of sanctions is that the interrogative format seems to carry a certain ‚openness‘ that might be seen as a mitigating effect and thus provides an interesting point of comparison with other mitigating devices. This study uses the methods of conversation analysis and interactional linguistics. It is based on a collection of 148 interrogative sanctions (out of which 84 are non-polar interrogatives) covering the four languages. I draw on coded data from roughly 1000 cases to get a first overall idea of how the interrogative format might differ from other formats, and how it might interrelate with specific features – for example, if subsequently an account is delivered. Going more into depth, the interrogative sanctions will then be analyzed with respect to their formal design (e.g. polar questions vs. content questions vs. tag questions, Rossano 2010; Hayano 2013) and to their pragmatic implications. I also analyze reactions to such sanctions – both formally (cf. Enfield et al. 2019, 279) and, again, from an interactional perspective (e.g. acceptance/compliance vs. challenging/defiance; Kent 2012; Cekaite 2020). A more detailed zooming in on the sequential unfolding of some particularly interesting
instances of sanctioning interrogatives will make the picture complete.
This paper presents a dictionary writing system developed at the Institute for the German Language in Mannheim (IDS) for an ongoing international lexicographical project that traces the way of German loanwords in the East Slavic languages Russian, Belarusian and Ukrainian that were possibly borrowed via Polish. The results will be published in the Lehnwortportal Deutsch (LWP, lwp.ids-mannheim.de), a web portal for loanword dictionaries with German as the common donor language. The system described here is currently in use for excerpting data from a large range of historical and contemporary East Slavic monolingual dictionaries. The paper focuses on the tools that help in merging excerpts that are etymologically related to one and the same Polish etymon. The merging process involves eliminating redundancies and inconsistencies and, above all, mapping word senses of excerpted entries onto a common cross-language set of ‘metasenses’. This mapping may involve literally hundreds of excerpted East Slavic word senses, including quotations, for one ‘underlying’ Polish etymon.
This paper reports on an ongoing international project of compiling a freely accessible online Dictionary of German Loans in Polish Dialects. The dictionary will be the first comprehensive lexicographic compendium of its kind, serving as a complement to existing resources on German lexical loans in the literary or standard language. The empirical results obtained in the project will shed new light on the distribution of German loanwords among different dialects, also in comparison to the well-documented situation in written Polish. The dictionary will have a strong focus on the dialectal distribution of Polish dialectal variants for a given German etymon, accessible through interactive cartographic representations and corresponding search options. The editorial process is realized with dedicated collaborative web tools. The new resource will be published as an integrated part of an online information system for German lexical borrowings in other languages, the Lehnwortportal Deutsch, and is therefore highly cross-linked with other loanword dictionaries on Polish as well as Slavic and further European languages.
ln dem vorliegenden Artikel zeigen die Autoren, welche Rolle Metaphern in Vorstellungswelt und Argumentation im Rahmen des politischen Diskurses spielen. Der Beitrag stellt eine empirische Analyse von polnischen und deutschen Pressetexten zum Thema der EU-Osterweiterung im Zeitraum Januar bis März 2000 dar. Der Analyse wurden auf polnischer Seite fünf der auflagestärksten überregionalen Tageszeitungen unterzogen. Auf deutscher Seite wurden die im ,Pressespiegel Polen‘ erfassten Zeitungen genutzt.
In English, past tense stative clauses embedded under a past-marked attitude verb, like Eric thought that Kalina was sick, can receive two interpretations, differing on when the state of the complement is understood to hold, i.e. Kalina’s sickness precedes the time of Eric’s thinking (backward-shifted reading), or Kalina is sick at the time of Eric’s thinking (simultaneous reading). As is well known, the availability of the simultaneous reading—also called Sequence of tense (SOT)—is subject to cross-linguistic variation. Non-SOT languages only allow for the backward-shifted interpretation. This cross-linguistic variation has been analysed in two main ways in the literature: a structural approach, connecting the availability of the simultaneous reading in a language to a syntactic mechanism that allows the embedded past not to be interpreted; and an implicature approach, which links the absence of such a reading to the presence of a “cessation” implicature associated with past tense. We report a series of experiments on Polish, which is commonly classified as a non-SOT language. First, we investigate the interpretation of complement clauses embedded under past-marked attitude verbs in Polish and English. This investigation revealed a difference between these two languages in the availability of simultaneous interpretations for past-under-past complement clauses, albeit not as large as a binary distinction between SOT and non-SOT languages would lead us to expect. We then address the question of whether the lower acceptability we observe for simultaneous readings in Polish might be due to an embedded cessation implicature. On the way to address this question, we show that in simple matrix clauses, Polish gives rise to the same cessation inference as English. Then we investigate Polish past-under-past sentences in positive and negative contexts, comparing their potential cessation implicature to the exclusive implicature of disjunction. In our results, we found that the latter was endorsed more often in positive than in negative contexts, as expected, while the cessation implicature was endorsed overall very little, with no difference across contexts. The disanalogy between the disjunction and the temporal cases, and the insensitivity of the latter to monotonicity, are a challenge for the implicature approach, and cast doubts on associating SOT phenomena with implicatures.
In G, E, I, and H there are constructions with accusative NPs being the external argument of an infinitival, (1) to (4). In P these accusative NPs can only co-occur with an adjectival participle, (5), a construction also occurring in E, (6). The talk compares the syntactic and semantic structure of these constructions focussing on the syntactic category of the nonfinite clause, the status of the accusative NP, the status of the infinitive, restructuring effects, and embedding predicates (including aspect).
i. As to G, E, I, and H, the infinitival clause is regarded as a TP, i.e., a small clause. Its accusative NP and infinitival predicate form a unit – [4], [12], [8]. The AcI denotes, according to [4], an eventuality, which prevents it from being negated. Its subject is case marked by the matrix predicate, either by ECM or subject-to-object raising – [9] and [10]. AcI-constructions can show clause union effects, (7). H additionally allows Dative subjects in infinitive clauses, the latter only being licensed by impersonal predicates and co-occurring with an agreeing infinitive, (8a), – [3]. In case there is no agreeing infinitive, the Dative NP is the experiencer of the matrix clause, (8b). As for Italian, it allows Nominative subject NPs in the infinitive clause, (9a, b).
ii. As to P, small clause constructions differ structurally from E, G, I and H ones – [6], [7]. P small clauses are realizable by copula constructions with verbal być ‘be’ pronominal to ‘it’, (10), or “dual” copula elements, (cooccurrence of a pronominal and a verbal element, [1]), varying with respect to selectional restrictions (part of speech or case within complement phrases, extraction possibilities, [1]). The P counterpart to the AcI-constructions is the secondary predication over an accusative object via an adjectival present participle, (5), (11) and (12). The adjectival participle construction is systematically paraphrasable via clauses introduced by jak ‘how’ (11’) and (12’). In Polish, adjectival phrases like recytującego wiersz ‘reciting’, (11), and wracającego z podróży ‘returning’, (12), clearly function as adjuncts of the accusative object go ‘him’. In our talk, we will compare this P view to languages with typical AcI-constructions, where the AcI-clause is standardly analyzed as a complement of a matrix verb.
Vorwort
(1997)
Der Aufsatz knüpft an die Diskussion zur Verwendung von formalen grammatischen Kategorien im Sprachvergleich an (vgl. insbesondere Haspelmath 2007, 2010a, b und Newmeyer 2007, 2010). Es wird dabei nicht danach gefragt, ob sprachübergreifende grammatische Kategorien (oder genauer gesagt Kategorienausprägungen) existieren oder nicht bzw. ob einzelsprachliche grammatische Kategorien im Sprachvergleich sinnvoll einsetzbar sind, sondern wie ähnlich bzw. unterschiedlich einzelsprachliche Kategorien bzw. Kategorisierungen sind. Das Ziel ist damit, eine Methode zur Messung des Äquivalenzgrades von grammatischen Kategorien in verschiedenen Sprachen zu präsentieren; dies wird am Beispiel des IMPERATIVS im Deutschen, Englischen, Polnischen und Tschechischen illustriert.
Validating the Performativity Hypothesis to Neg-Raising using corpus data: Evidence from Polish
(2021)
This paper provides a treatment of Polish Plural Comitative Constructions in the paradigm of HPSG in the tradition of Pollard and Sag (1994). Plural Comitative Constructions (PCCs) have previously been treated in terms of coordination, complementation and adjunction. The objective of this paper is to show that PCCs are neither instances of typical coordinate structures nor of typical complement or adjunct structures. It thus appears difficult to properly describe them by means of the standard principles of syntax and semantics. The analysis proposed in this paper accounts for the syntactic and semantic properties of PCCs in Polish by assuming an adjunction-based syntactic structure for PCCs, and by treating the indexical information provided by PCCs not as subject to any inheritance or composition, but as a result of applying a set of principles on number, gender and person resolution that also hold for ordinary coordinate structures.
This paper presents the current results of an ongoing research project on corpus distribution of prepositions and pronouns within Polish preposition-pronoun contractions. The goal of the project is to provide a quantitative description of Polish preposition-pronoun contractions taking into consideration morphosyntactic properties of their components. It is expected that the results will provide a basis for a revision of the traditionally assumed inflectional paradigms of Polish pronouns and, thus, for a possible remodeling of these paradigms. The results of corpus-based investigations of the distribution of prepositions within preposition-pronoun contractions can be used for grammar-theoretical and lexicographic purposes.
This paper provides a lexicalist formal description of preposition-pronoun contraction (PPC) in Polish, using the theoretical framework of HPSG. Considering the behaviour of PPC with respect to the prosodic, categorial, syntactic and semantic properties, the assumption can be made that each PPC is a morphological unit with prepositional status. The crucial difference between a PPC and a typical preposition consists, besides the phonological form, in the valence properties. While a typical preposition realizes its complement externally via general constraints on phrase structure, the realization of a PPC argument is effected internally by virtue of its lexical entry. Here, we will provide the appropriate implicational lexical constraints that license both typical Ps and PPCs.
Dieser Aufsatz befasst sich mit pragmatischen Aspekten von Negationsanhebung (NA), die vor allem in Horn (1978) erörtert wurden, und mit performativischen Eigenschaften von NA-Konstruktionen, die ursprünglich in Prince (1976), vor allem mit Bezug auf französische Daten diskutiert wurden. Das Ziel ist, die Kernaussagen von Horn (1978) und Prince (1976) mit Korpusdaten im übereinzelsprachlichen Kontext zu validieren. Als Gegenstand der Untersuchung werden deutsche und polnische NA-Konstruktionen herangezogen und entsprechend zwei verschiedene monolinguale Korpora als Datenquelle benutzt.
Deklinationsklassen bilden einen Grundpfeiler des traditionellen Paradigmenmodells, das nach dem Vorbild der Grammatiken der klassischen Sprachen auch für die Beschreibung der deutschen Substantivflexion Verwendung gefunden hat. Im vorliegenden Beitrag soll die Rolle, die Deklinationsklassen in der deutschen Substantivdeklination spielen, überprüft werden. Beobachtungen zur Substantivflexion in verschiedenen europäischen Sprachen, darunter das Ungarische, das Polnische und das Italienische, die unterschiedliche Positionen innerhalb eines Spektrums besetzen, das vom hochflexivischen Lateinischen bis zu Sprachen ohne Deklinationsklassen (wie dem Englischen oder dem Türkischen) reicht, liefern Bausteine für eine Neuanalyse der deutschen Substantivflexion. Sichtbar wird, dass die deutsche Substantivflexion, bildlich gesprochen, auf dem Weg vom „Typus Latein“ zum „Typus Englisch“ schon sehr viel weiter fortgeschritten ist, als dies traditionelle Darstellungen nahe legen. An die Stelle der für kanonische Deklinationsklassen charakteristischen Sätze von klassentypischen Flexiven ist eine kleine Menge von Mustern der Stammformenbildung getreten.
Gegenstand des Vortrags ist das Projekt "Grammatik des Deutschen im europäischen Vergleich" der Abteilung Grammatik des IDS. Mit dem Projekt wird eine innovative Form der vergleichenden Grammatikschreibung realisiert, die a) sprachtypologisch fundiert ist, b) statt eines bilateralen Vergleichs das Deutsche mit einem breiten Spektrum europäischer Sprachen (mit den Kernkontrastsprachen Englisch, Französisch, Polnisch und Ungarisch) kontrastiert und c) die grammatischen Strukturen des Deutschen auf diesem Hintergrund expliziter herausarbeitet. In dem Vortrag werde ich das Projekt mit seinen beiden gegenwärtigen Teilprojekten "Grammatik des Nominals" und "Wortphonologie" vorstellen.
This chapter describes the resources that speakers of Polish use when recruiting assistance and collaboration from others in everyday social interaction. The chapter draws on data from video recordings of informal conversation in Polish, and reports language-specific findings generated within a large-scale comparative project involving eight languages from five continents (see other chapters of this volume). The resources for recruitment described in this chapter include linguistic structures from across the levels of grammatical organization, as well as gestural and other visible and contextual resources of relevance to the interpretation of action in interaction. The presentation of categories of recruitment, and elements of recruitment sequences, follows the coding scheme used in the comparative project (see Chapter 2 of the volume). This chapter extends our knowledge of the structure and usage of Polish with detailed attention to the properties of sequential structure in conversational interaction. The chapter is a contribution to an emerging field of pragmatic typology.
Anhand einer Auswahl historischer Reden je dreier prominenter Deutscher und Polen wird eine signalphonetisch gestützte sprachvergleichende Analyse der glottalen Markierung vokalinitialer Wörter durchgeführt.
Generell erweist sich die glottale Markierung als variabel entlang eines Kontinuums zwischen einem echten glottalen Verschlusslaut (harter Stimmeinsatz) des Initialvokals über zeitlich nicht exakt koordinierte Glottalisierungen (Knarrstimme) und leichte Reflexe im Grundfrequenzverlauf bis hin zum völligen Fehlen einer Markierung.
Insgesamt zeigen sich im Polnischen gegenüber dem Deutschen seltener glottale Markierungen sowie eine sprachübergreifende schwache Abhängigkeit der Markierungshäufigkeit vom Sprechtempo (weniger bei Sprechtempoerhöhung).
Die Auftretenshäufigkeit glottaler Markierung wird sprachabhängig zudem durch unterschiedliche Faktoren beeinflusst: Für das Deutsche zeigen sich signifikante Einflüsse sowohl des Worttyps (Inhaltswörter mit häufigerer Markierung gegenüber Funktionswörtern) als auch der Betonung (betonte Silben mit häufigerer Markierung gegenüber unbetonten), während im Polnischen hier kein Einfluss sichtbar ist. Dafür zeigt das Polnische gegenüber dem Deutschen einen signifikanten Einfluss der Position innerhalb der Phrase (häufigere glottale Markierung in phraseninitialen im Gegensatz zu phrasenmedialen Wörtern). Diese sprachspezifischen Unterschiede können mit den prosodischen Charakteristika beider Sprachen Zusammenhängen. Im Unterschied zum Deutschen mit einem freien Wortakzent fällt dieser im Polnischen auf die Penultima, ist somit vorhersagbar und bedarf demzufolge keiner zusätzlichen glottalen Markierung im Sprachsignal.
Beide Sprachen hingegen zeigen übereinstimmend einen klar ausgeprägten Effekt der Vokalhöhe auf das Auftreten der glottalen Markierung (tiefe Vokale > mittlere Vokale > hohe Vokale).
This edited collection provides an overview of linguistic diversity, societal discourses and interaction between majorities and minorities in the Baltic States. It presents a wide range of methods and research paradigms including folk linguistics, discourse analysis, narrative analyses, code alternation, ethnographic observations, language learning motivation, languages in education and language acquisition. Grouped thematically, its chapters examine regional varieties and minority languages (Latgalian, Võro, urban dialects in Lithuania, Polish in Lithuania); the integration of the Russian language and its speakers; and the role of international languages like English in Baltic societies. The editors’ introductory and concluding chapters provide a comparative perspective that situates these issues within the particular history of the region and broader debates on language and nationalism at a time of both increased globalization and ethno-regionalism. This book will appeal in particular to students and scholars of multilingualism, sociolinguistics, language discourses and language policy, and provide a valuable resource for researchers focusing on Baltic States, Northern Europe and the post-Soviet world in the related fields of history, political science, sociology and anthropology.
Der Sammelband zur typologisch und kontrastiv vergleichenden grammatischen Erforschung und Beschreibung des Satzanfangs des Deutschen und vier seiner Kontrastsprachen ist ein Ergebnis eines Forschungsnetzwerks, bestehend aus dem Institut für Deutsche Sprache (Mannheim) und Forschergruppen verschiedener europäischer Universitäten. Unter Berücksichtigung insbesondere morphosyntaktischer und informationsstruktureller Aspekte werden die satztopologischen Unterschiede der typologisch recht heterogenen Sprachen bzw. Sprachfamilien unter verschiedenen Gesichtspunkten beleuchtet. Die Untersuchungen werden korpusbasiert durchgeführt, wobei sich die Hälfte der Beiträge auf aufbereitete POS-getaggte Wikipedia-Korpora stützt. Die quantitativ ausgerichteten Korpusanalysen ermöglichen einen genauen Einblick in die unterschiedlichen Strukturmerkmale der betreffenden Sprachen sowie in sprachübergreifende Textmerkmale, und die qualitativen Untersuchungen zeigen Ähnlichkeiten und Abweichungen bei bestimmten Verfahren, die sich morphosyntaktisch iederschlagen und besonders am Satzanfang relevant sind. Insgesamt erlauben die Beiträge Hypothesen zu topologisch und informationsstrukturell markierten Satzanfängen und zu Präferenzen in den jeweiligen Sprachen, aber auch zu möglichen Konstanten und Gemeinsamkeiten, was – auf differenziertere Korpora erweitert – für die Bereiche Sprache und Kognition sowie computergestützte Übersetzung ein großer Gewinn sein dürfte.