后殖民英语语法的近期变化:加勒比海和印度新闻写作中的词根变异的实时研究

Pub Date : 2022-03-01 DOI:10.1177/00754242211052490
Stephanie Hackert, Diana Wengler
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本文对五种英语变体的属格变化进行了历时性分析。基于20世纪60年代和21世纪初巴哈马群岛、牙买加、印度、英国和美国的一组匹配的报纸语料库,我们研究了由影响变量的约束模式定义的属格交替的基本语法的变化和变化。我们使用随机森林和多因素预测和偏差分析来分析一个超过22,000个属性标记的丰富注释集。我们的分析证实了关于后殖民英语的发现,特别是在加勒比地区,这些变体正在参与美国主导的全球语法趋势,例如,致密化,而不是真正接近美国的规范。我们还注意到,与生产相关的对属性变化的约束,如句法权重或给定性,增加了它们的影响。虽然都市英语和后殖民英语有一个共同的核心语法属性变化,但在语义和社会文化决定的预测因素(如文本类型)方面存在明显的差异。总的来说,我们看到都市英语和后殖民英语之间的差距越来越大。巴哈马英语的情况特别有趣,因为它在殖民时期似乎相当以美国为导向,但自独立以来,它与其他后殖民英语保持一致。
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Recent Grammatical Change in Postcolonial Englishes: A Real-time Study of Genitive Variation in Caribbean and Indian News Writing
This paper presents a diachronic analysis of genitive variation in five varieties of English. Based on a set of matching newspaper corpora from the 1960s and the early 2000s from the Bahamas, Jamaica, India, Great Britain, and the U.S., we look into variation and change in the underlying grammar of the genitive alternation, as defined by patterns of constraints affecting the variable. We employ random forests and Multifactorial Prediction and Deviation Analysis to analyze a richly annotated set of over 22,000 genitive tokens. Our analysis corroborates findings with regard to postcolonial Englishes, particularly in the Caribbean, that suggest that these varieties are partaking in American-led global trends in grammar toward, e.g., densification, without actually approximating American norms. We also notice that production-related constraints on genitive variation, such as syntactic weight or givenness, have increased their effects. While metropolitan and postcolonial Englishes share a core grammar of genitive variation, there is noticeable variation particularly with regard to semantic and socioculturally determined predictors such as text type. Overall, we see a widening gap between metropolitan and postcolonial Englishes. The case of Bahamian English is especially interesting as it appears fairly American-oriented during colonial times but has aligned with other postcolonial Englishes since independence.
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