
Egypt in the early Byzantine period was a bilingual country where Greek and Egyptian (Coptic) were used alongside each other. Historical studies along with linguistic studies of the phonology and lexicon of early Byzantine Greek in Egypt testify to this situation. In order to describe the linguistic traces that the language-contact situation left behind in individuals' linguistic output, Coptic Interference in the Syntax of Greek Letters from Egypt analyses the syntax of early Byzantine Greek texts from Egypt. The primary object of interest is bilingual interference in the syntax of verbs, adverbial phrases, clause linkage as well as in semi-formulaic expressions and formulaic frames. The study is based on a corpus of Greek and Coptic private letters on papyrus, which date from the fourth to mid-seventh centuries, originate from Egypt and belong to bilingual, Greek-Coptic, papyrus archives.
This study investigates the linguistic impact of Coptic-Greek bilingualism on the syntax of private letters written in Egypt during the early Byzantine period. Victoria Beatrix Maria Fendel, a scholar in classical philology, utilizes a corpus of papyri to identify specific syntactic traces of language contact. The work argues that the coexistence of these two languages resulted in measurable interference patterns within the Greek linguistic output of the era.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of papyrology and historical linguistics regard this monograph as a rigorous examination of language contact in late antiquity. Readers frequently note the technical density of the linguistic analysis, which provides a specialized framework for understanding bilingualism in the Byzantine world.
Page Count:
560
Publication Date:
2022-12-15
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192869175
ISBN-13:
9780192869173
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