
Studies of bilingual behavior have been proliferating for decades, yet short shrift has been given to its major manifestation, the incorporation of words from one language into the discourse of another. This volume redresses that imbalance by going straight to the source: bilingual speakers in their social context. Building on more than three decades of original research based on vast quantities of spontaneous performance data and a highly ramified analytical apparatus, Shana Poplack characterizes the phenomenon of lexical borrowing in the speech community and in the grammar, both synchronically and diachronically. In contrast to most other treatments, which deal with the product of borrowing (if they consider it at all), this book examines the process: how speakers go about incorporating foreign items into their bilingual discourse; how they adapt them to recipient-language grammatical structure; how these forms diffuse across speakers and communities; how long they persist in real time; and whether they change over the duration. Attacking some of the most contentious issue in language mixing research empirically, it tests hypotheses about established loanwords, nonce borrowings and code-switches on a wealth of unique datasets on typologically similar and distinct language pairs. A major focus is the detailed analysis of integration: the principal mechanism underlying the borrowing process. Though the shape the borrowed form assumes may be colored by community convention, Poplack shows that the act of transforming donor-language elements into native material is universal. Emphasis on actual speaker behavior coupled with strong standards of proof, including data-driven reports of rates of occurrence, conditioning of variant choice and measures of statistical significance, make Borrowing an indispensable reference on language contact and bilingual behavior.
This volume investigates the mechanisms and social dynamics of lexical borrowing, seeking to understand how foreign words are integrated into the grammar and discourse of bilingual speech communities. Shana Poplack, a prominent linguist, draws upon over thirty years of empirical research to analyze how bilingual speakers incorporate donor-language elements into their native structures. By focusing on the process of borrowing rather than just the final product, the author provides a rigorous framework for understanding how these forms persist, diffuse, and evolve within real-time social contexts.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a foundational text in the field of sociolinguistics due to its heavy reliance on empirical data and statistical rigor. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for researchers and students of language contact.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2017-11-16
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190256370
ISBN-13:
9780190256371
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