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In a number of languages, agreement in specificational copular sentences can or must be with the second of the two nominals, even when it is the first that occupies the canonical subject position. Béjar & Kahnemuyipour (2017) show that Persian and Eastern Armenian are two such languages. They then argue that ‘NP2 agreement’ occurs because the nominal in subject position (NP1) is not accessible to an external probe. It follows that actual agreement with NP1 should never be possible: the alternative to NP2 agreement should be ‘default’ agreement. We show that this prediction is false. In addition to showing that English has NP1, not default, agreement, we present new data from Icelandic, a language with rich agreement morphology, including cases that involve ‘plurale tantum’ nominals as NP1. These allow us to control for any confound from the fact that typically in a specificational sentence with two nominals differing in number, it is NP2 that is plural. We show that even in this case, the alternative to agreement with NP2 is agreement with NP1, not a default. Hence, we conclude that whatever the correct analysis of specificational sentences turns out to be, it must not predict obligatory failure of NP1 agreement.
We question the growing consensus in the literature that European Americans behave as a homogenous pan-ethnic coalition of voters. Seemingly below the radar of scholarship on voting groups in American politics, we identify a group of white voters that behaves differently from others: German Americans, the largest ethnic group, regionally concentrated in the ‘Swinging Midwest’. Using county level voting returns, ancestry group information from the American Community Survey (ACS), current survey data and historical census data going back as early as 1910, we provide evidence for a partisan and a non-partisan pathway that motivated German Americans to vote for Trump in 2016: a historically grown association with the Republican Party and an acquired taste for isolationist attitudes that mobilizes non-partisan German Americans to support isolationist candidates. Our findings indicate that European American experiences of migration and integration still echo into the political arena of today.
In this paper, we present an overview of freely available web applications providing online access to spoken language corpora. We explore and discuss various solutions with which the corpus providers and corpus platform developers address the needs of researchers who are working with spoken language. The paper aims to contribute to the long-overdue exchange and discussion of methods and best practices in the design of online access to spoken language corpora.
This paper investigates the use of linking adverbs in adversative constructions in German and Italian. In Italian those constructions are very frequently formulated with adverbs such as invece, while wordings without a lexical connective are more typical of German. Corpus data show that the syntactic und semantic conditions favouring the use of adversative adverbs are by and large the same in both languages. Lexical connectives can increase explicitness when the intended adversative interpretation is not obvious on other grounds. The higher frequency of adversative adverbs in Italian is shown to be a consequence of the more restrictive rules of the placement of prosodic accent.
In the first volume of Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory, Gries (2005. Null-hypothesis significance testing of word frequencies: A follow-up on Kilgarriff. Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory 1(2). doi:10.1515/cllt.2005.1.2.277. http://www.degruyter.com/view//cllt.2005.1.issue-2/cllt.2005.1.2.277/cllt.2005.1.2.277.xml: 285) asked whether corpus linguists should abandon null-hypothesis significance testing. In this paper, I want to revive this discussion by defending the argument that the assumptions that allow inferences about a given population – in this case about the studied languages – based on results observed in a sample – in this case a collection of naturally occurring language data – are not fulfilled. As a consequence, corpus linguists should indeed abandon null-hypothesis significance testing.
There are strict formal requirements for the use of a comma. However, there are none regarding the comma’s actual shape. In printed fonts, it is determined by the font’s specification. In hand-written texts though, the shape of the comma is variable; most writers choose from a set of straight, convex and concave shapes. By using a corpus of 1464 commas written by 99 individuals, we will present three case studies of persons whose comma shapes do somehow correlate with linguistic structures. With that, we might identify a few (possibly subconscious) shaping strategies. Some writers might mark a norm insecurity by a different comma form, others might mark the function of the entity which is segmented by the comma, or the comma type itself (sentence boundary, exposition or coordination).
Terminological resources play a central role in the organization and retrieval of scientific texts. Both simple keyword lists and advanced modelings of relationships between terminological concepts can make a most valuable contribution to the analysis, classification, and finding of appropriate digital documents, either on the web or within local repositories. This seems especially true for long-established scientific fields with elusive theoretical and historical branches, where the use of terminology within documents from different origins is often far from being consistent. In this paper, we report on the progress of a linguistically motivated project on the onomasiological re-modeling of the terminological resources for the grammatical information system grammis. We present the design principles and the results of their application. In particular, we focus on new features for the authoring backend and discuss how these innovations help to evaluate existing, loosely structured terminological content, as well as to efficiently deal with automatic term extraction. Furthermore, we introduce a transformation to a future SKOS representation. We conclude with a positioning of our resources with regard to the Knowledge Organization discourse and discuss how a highly complex information environment like grammis benefits from the re-designed terminological KOS.
This article describes an English Zulu learners’ dictionary that is part of a larger set of information tools, namely an online Zulu course, an e-dictionary of possessives (which was implemented earlier) accompanied by training software offering translation tasks on several levels, and an ontology of morphemic items categorizing and describing all parts of speech of Zulu. The underlying lexicographic database contains the usual type of lexicographic data, such as translation equivalents and their respective morphosyntactic data, but its entries have been extended with data related to the lessons of the online course in order to enable the learner to link both tools autonomously. The ‘outer matter’ is integrated into the website in the form of several texts on additional web pages (how-to-use, typical outputs, grammar tables, information on morphosyntactic rules, etc.). The dictionary comprises a modular system, where each module fulfils one of the necessary functions.
Just like most varieties of West Germanic, virtually all varieties of German use a construction in which a cognate of the English verb 'do' (standard German 'tun') functions as an auxiliary and selects another verb in the bare infinitive, a construction known as 'do'-periphrasis or 'do'-support. The present paper provides an Optimality Theoretic (OT) analysis of this phenomenon. It builds on a previous analysis by Bader and Schmid (An OT-analysis of 'do'-support in Modern German, 2006) but (i) extends it from root clauses to subordinate clauses and (ii) aims to capture all of the major distributional patterns found across (mostly non-standard) varieties of German. In so doing, the data are used as a testing ground for different models of German clause structure. At first sight, the occurrence of 'do' in subordinate clauses, as found in many varieties, appears to support the standard CP-IP-VP analysis of German. In actual fact, however, the full range of data turn out to challenge, rather than support, this model. Instead, I propose an analysis within the IP-less model by Haider (Deutsche Syntax - generativ. Vorstudien zur Theorie einer projektiven Grammatik, Narr, Tübingen, 1993 et seq.). In sum, the 'do'-support data will be shown to have implications not only for the analysis of clause structure but also for the OT constraints commonly assumed to govern the distribution of 'do', for the theory of non-projecting words (Toivonen in Non-projecting words, Kluwer, Dordrecht, 2003) as well as research on grammaticalization.
Although there is a growing interest of policy makers in higher education issues (especially on an international scale), there is still a lack of theoretically well-grounded comparative analyses of higher education policy. Even broadly discussed topics in higher education research like the potential convergence of European higher education systems in the course of the Bologna Process suffer from a thin empirical and comparative basis. This paper aims to deal with these problems by addressing theoretical questions concerning the domestic impact of the Bologna Process and the role national factors play in determining its effects on cross-national policy convergence. It develops a distinct theoretical approach for the systematic and comparative analysis of cross-national policy convergence. In doing so, it relies upon insights from related research areas — namely literature on Europeanization as well as studies dealing with cross-national policy convergence.
In the project LeGeDe („Lexik des gesprochenen Deutsch”), we are developing a corpus-based lexicographical resource focusing on features of the lexicon of spoken German. To investigate the expectations of future users, two studies were conducted: interviews with a smaller group of experts and a large-scale online survey. We report on selected results, mainly from the online survey and with a focus on the learning perspective. We want to show if and to which extent the L2-learners’
expectations differ from those of native speakers and in which aspects the two groups agree. We also want to give an outlook on the possibilities that will be available to learners in the planned lexicographical resource.
Korpora sind – als idealerweise digital verfüg- und auswertbare Sammlungen von Texten – eine wertvolle empirische Grundlage linguistischer Studien. Eigene Korpora aufzubauen ist, je nach Sprachausschnitt, mit unterschiedlichen Herausforderungen verbunden. Zu allen Texten sollten Metadaten zu den Textentstehungsbedingungen (Zeit, Quelle usw.) erhoben werden, um diese als Variablen in Auswertungen einbeziehen zu können. Andere Informationen wie etwa die Themenzugehörigkeit (oder Annotationen auch unterhalb der Textebene) sind auch hilfreich, in vielerlei Hinsicht aber schwieriger pauschal taxonomisch vorzugeben, geschweige denn, operationell zu ermitteln. Jenseits der »materiellen« Verfügbarkeit der Texte und der technischen Aufbereitung sind es das Urheberrecht, vor allem Lizenz- bzw. Nutzungsrechte, sowie ethische Verantwortung und Persönlichkeitsrechte, die beachtet werden müssen, auch um zu gewährleisten, dass die Daten für die Reproduktion der Studien Dritten rechtssicher zugänglich gemacht werden dürfen. Bevor für ein Vorhaben ein neues Korpus aufgebaut wird, sollte deshalb am besten geprüft werden, ob nicht ein geeignetes bereits zur Verfügung steht. Wenn ein Korpus aufgebaut wird, sollte für eine nachhaltige Aufbewahrung und Zugänglichmachung gesorgt und die Existenz an geeigneter Stelle dokumentiert werden.
Repeating the movements associated with activities such as drawing or sports typically leads to improvements in kinematic behavior: these movements become faster, smoother, and exhibit less variation. Likewise, practice has also been shown to lead to faster and smoother movement trajectories in speech articulation. However, little is known about its effect on articulatory variability. To address this, we investigate the extent to which repetition and predictability influence the articulation of the frequent German word “sie” [zi] (they). We find that articulatory variability is proportional to speaking rate and the duration of [zi], and that overall variability decreases as [zi] is repeated during the experiment. Lower variability is also observed as the conditional probability of [zi] increases, and the greatest reduction in variability occurs during the execution of the vocalic target of [i]. These results indicate that practice can produce observable differences in the articulation of even the most common gestures used in speech.
This study builds on a large body of work on the use of linguistic forms for requests in social interaction. Using Conversation Analysis / Interactional Linguistics, this study explores the use of two recurrent linguistic formats for requesting in spoken German – simple interrogatives ('do you do ..?') and kannst du VP? ('can you do..?') interrogatives. Based on a corpus of video-recorded, naturally occurring data of mundane data, this study demonstrates one of the interactional factors that is relevant for the choice between alternative interrogative request formats in spoken German – recipient's embodied availability before and during the request initiation. It is shown that simple interrogatives are used to request an action from a recipient who is either available or involved in their own project, which, however, does not have to be suspended or interrupted for the compliance with the request. In contrast, kannst du VP? interrogatives occur in environments in which the recipient is already engaged in a project that must be suspended in order to grant the request.
Seit der Antike suggerieren Grammatiker, dass es für die Beschreibung bestimmter Sprachen nützlich ist, von einer Wortklasse auszugehen, die im Deutschen mit dem Terminus „Konjunktionen” belegt ist. So ging die traditionelle Grammatikschreibung auch für das Deutsche von der Wohlfundiertheit dieses Begriffs aus. In einigen neueren Grammatiken des Deutschen findet sich nun der Terminus „Konjunktion” nicht mehr, bzw. wird der Terminus nicht in der überkommenen Art verwandt. Gleichzeitig fehlt dort die mit ihm verknüpfte Klassenbildung. Dabei verzichten diese Grammatiken auf eine kritische Auseinandersetzung mit der traditionellen Annahme einer solchen Wortklasse bzw. argumentieren nicht überzeugend gegen sie. Ich möchte im Folgenden versuchen zu zeigen, warum auch künftige Grammatiken und Wörterbücher des Deutschen auf die Annahme einer Wortklasse „Konjunktionen” im traditionellen Sinn verzichten und stattdessen mindestens zwei Klassen - „Konjunktoren” und „Subjunktoren” - ansetzen sollten, deren Klassenmerkmale ich im Übrigen zu präzisieren versuchen werde. Des Weiteren ordne ich den letztgenannten Klassen die entsprechenden Einheiten des Deutschen zu.
This paper presents observations on the phonetic realisations of the German particles ja – ‘yes’ and naja – approximately ‘well’. As part of a large-scale study on the particle ja, we identified numerous instances in the dataset that had been orthographically transcribed as ja, but were phonetically realised as [nja]. Using phonetic and functional parameters, we explore the question whether these instances can be attributed to either the lexeme ja or naja. While phonetic measurements yield ambivalent results, analyses of pragmatic parameters such as function and turn position seem to indicate that [nja] was predominantly intended to be ja, although some functional differences between ja and [nja] could also be identified.
Der Artikel präsentiert eine Untersuchung zur Häufigkeit und funktionalen Vielfalt der deutschen Partikel ja in einem Korpus 22 monomodaler Dialoge junger Frauen. Vor dem Hintergrund früherer Untersuchungen wird auf Grundlage einer umfangreichen, homogenen Stichprobe das komplexe kommunikative Verwendungsspektrum der Partikel dargestellt. Außerdem wird die Adäquatheit bisheriger funktionaler Aufschlüsselungen vor dem Hintergrund wenig oder gar nicht beschriebener Funktionaler Varianten diskutiert.
Am 13. und 14. Mai 2022 trafen sich 26 Nachwuchswissenschaftler:innen zum 5. Treffen des Netzwerks für Doktorand:innen der Gesprächsforschung (DokGF). Die Gründung dieses Netzwerk ist auf die Initiative von Elena Becker (Halle) und Maximilian Krug (Duisburg-Essen) im Herbst 2019 zurückzuführen (vgl. Torres Cajo/Franzen 2019). Auch dieses Mal fand die Veranstaltung online statt. Das DokGF-Treffen wurde von Teresa Schirmes (Bochum), Henning Vahlenkamp (Bremen) und Svenja Heuser (Luxembourg) organisiert und moderiert. Es bot den Teilnehmer:innen die Möglichkeit sich kennenzulernen, zu vernetzen und sich über aktuelle methodische, theoretische und empirische Themen der deutschsprachigen Gesprächsforschung auszutauschen. Ebenso standen allgemeine Belange und die Selbstorganisation während der Promotion auf der Agenda. Als Keynote-Speaker waren Arnulf Deppermann (Mannheim) und Martin Hartung (Göttingen) eingeladen.