First-Person Plural Subject Pronoun Expression in Mexican Spanish Spoken in Georgia

Philip P. Limerick
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Abstract Variationist research on subject pronoun expression (SPE) in Spanish typically incorporates all grammatical persons/numbers into the same analysis, with important exceptions such as studies focusing exclusively on first-person singular (e.g., Travis, Catherine E. 2005. The yo-yo effect: Priming in subject expression in Colombian Spanish. In Randall Gess & Edward J Rubin (eds.), Selected papers from the 34th Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages (LSRL), 329–349. Amsterdam, Salt Lake City: Benjamins 2004; Travis, Catherine E. 2007. Genre effects on subject expression in Spanish: Priming in narrative and conversation. Language Variation and Change 19. 101–135; Travis, Catherine E. & Rena Torres Cacoullos. 2012. What do subject pronouns do in discourse? Cognitive, mechanical and constructional factors in variation. Cognitive Linguistics 23(4). 711–748), third-person singular (Shin, Naomi Lapidus. 2014. Grammatical complexification in Spanish in New York: 3sg pronoun expression and verbal ambiguity. Language Variation and Change 26. 303–330), and third-person plural subjects (Lapidus, Naomi & Ricardo Otheguy. 2005. Overt nonspecific ellos in Spanish in New York. Spanish in Context 2(2). 157–174). The current study is the first variationist analysis (to the best of my knowledge) to focus solely on first-person plural SPE. It is well-established that nosotros/nosotras exhibits one of the lowest rates of SPE relative to the other persons/numbers; however, factors conditioning its variation are less understood. Conversational corpus data from Mexican Spanish are employed to examine tokens of first-person plural SPE (n=660) in terms of frequency and constraints, incorporating factors such as TMA, switch reference, and verb class in logistic regression analyses. Results suggest that nosotros, like other subjects, is strongly impacted by switch reference and tense-mood-aspect (TMA). However, the TMA effect is unique in that preterit aspect is shown to favor overt nosotros relative to other TMAs, diverging from previous studies. Furthermore, verb class — a factor found to be repeatedly significant in the literature — is inoperative for nosotros. These results suggest that nosotros does not respond to the same factors as other persons/numbers. Additionally, the findings lend support to researchers regarding the importance of studying individual persons/numbers in subject variation research.
乔治亚州墨西哥语第一人称复数主语代词表达
西班牙语主语代词表达的变异研究(SPE)通常将所有符合语法的人称/数纳入同一分析中,但也有一些重要的例外,如专门关注第一人称单数的研究(如Travis, Catherine E. 2005)。溜溜球效应:哥伦比亚西班牙语主语表达的启动效应。在Randall Gess和Edward J Rubin(编),从第34届语言学研讨会上的罗曼语(LSRL), 329-349选定的论文。阿姆斯特丹,盐湖城:Benjamins 2004;崔维斯,凯瑟琳E. 2007。体裁对西班牙语主语表达的影响:叙事和会话中的启动效应。语言的变异与变化101 - 135;Travis, Catherine E. & Rena Torres Cacoullos, 2012。主代词在语篇中有什么作用?变异中的认知、机械和结构因素。认知语言学23(4)。711-748),第三人称单数(Shin, Naomi Lapidus. 2014。纽约西班牙语的语法复杂化:3sg代词表达和言语歧义。语言的变异与变化303-330)和第三人称复数主语(Lapidus, Naomi & Ricardo Otheguy, 2005)。在纽约用西班牙语进行公开的非特异性对话。语境中的西班牙语2(2)。157 - 174)。目前的研究是第一个只关注第一人称复数SPE的变异分析(据我所知)。与其他人群相比,nosotros/nosotras是SPE发生率最低的人群之一。然而,影响其变化的因素尚不清楚。本文利用墨西哥西班牙语会话语料库数据来研究第一人称复数SPE (n=660)在频率和约束方面的表征,并结合逻辑回归分析中的TMA、开关参考和动词类等因素。结果表明,与其他被试一样,nosotros也受到切换参考和紧张情绪方面(TMA)的强烈影响。然而,与以往的研究不同,TMA效应的独特之处在于,相对于其他TMA,它更倾向于显性致癌性。此外,动词类别——一个在文献中反复出现的重要因素——对nosotros不起作用。这些结果表明,nosotros不像其他人/数字那样对相同的因素做出反应。此外,研究结果还支持了研究人员在受试者变异研究中研究个体/数字的重要性。
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