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Hispanic Linguistic Symposium. Contemporary trends in Hispanic and Lusophone linguistics: selected papers from the Hispanic Linguistic Symposium 2015 / edited by Jonathan E. MacDonald, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. — 1 online resource. — (Issues in Hispanic and Lusophone linguistics). — Papers presented at the annual Hispanic Linguistic Symposium (HLS) held at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, September 24-27, 2015. — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/1696828.pdf>.Дата создания записи: 14.11.2017 Тематика: Spanish language — Congresses.; Portuguese language — Congresses.; Portuguese language.; Spanish language.; FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY / Spanish Коллекции: EBSCO Разрешенные действия: –
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Оглавление
- Contemporary Trends in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- References
- Part 1. Language structure and use
- Chapter 1. SE-marked directed motion constructions: Anticausatives and figure reflexives
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Descriptive properties of se with intransitive motion verbs
- 2.1 Directed motion
- 2.2 Culmination
- 2.3 Other restrictions: Agentivity and permanence
- 3. On the connection between marked anticausatives and directed motion constructions
- 3. On the connection between marked anticausatives and directed motion constructions
- 4. Analysis
- 4.1 Anticausatives and intrinsic reflexives
- 4.2 Figure reflexives
- 4.3 se-marked directed motion verbs
- 5. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Chapter 2. Subcategorization and change: A diachronic analysis of sin embargo (de que)
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The construction: Data and summary of the properties
- 3. Previous accounts
- 4. Our account
- 4.1 The data
- 4.2 Sin embargo (de) que in the context of <(de) que> in the evolution of Spanish
- 4.2 Sin embargo (de) que in the context of <(de) que> in the evolution of Spanish
- 4.3 Discussion: The semantic and syntactic properties of the construction
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Corpora
- Chapter 3. Variable clitic placement in US Spanish
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Variable CP in Spanish
- 2.1 Clitic rates and conditioning factors
- 2.2 Linguistic factors
- 2.3 Social factors
- 3. Methodology
- 3.1 The data
- 3.2 Analysis
- 3.3 Coding
- 3.4 Predictions
- 4. Results
- 4.1 Clitic rates
- 4.2 Conditioning factors of CP
- 5. Discussion
- 6. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Chapter 4. Variable negative concord in Brazilian Portuguese: Acceptability and frequency
- 1. Introduction
- 2. (Lack of) negative concord in Brazilian Portuguese
- 3. Online survey of the acceptability of lack of NC
- 4. Results: Acceptability and postverbal frequency
- 5. The role of NI productivity
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 5. The simultaneous lenition of Spanish /ptk/ and /bdɡ/ as a chain shift in progress
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Push chain shifts
- 1.2 Lima Spanish
- 1.3 Cuzco Spanish
- 1.4 Motivation for the current study
- 2. Research questions and hypotheses
- 3. Methods
- 3.1 Participants
- 3.2 Materials
- 3.3 Tasks and recording
- 3.4 Acoustic measures
- 3.5 Data segmentation
- 3.6 Data extraction
- 3.7 Statistical analysis
- 4. Results
- 4.1 /ptk/
- 4.2 /bdɡ/
- 4.3 Dialect differences in variable importance and classification accuracy
- 5. Discussion
- 5.1 Evaluation of hypotheses
- 5.2 Simultaneous lenition of /ptk/ and /bdɡ/ in Spanish as a push chain shift
- 5.2 Simultaneous lenition of /ptk/ and /bdɡ/ in Spanish as a push chain shift
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix
- 1. Introduction
- Chapter 6. Are Argentines a-blind?: Acceptability of a-marked inanimate direct objects
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Previous literature
- 3. Variables
- 4. Research questions and hypotheses
- 5. Methodology
- 5.1 Instrument
- 5.2 Speakers
- 5.3 Participants
- 5.4 Data analysis
- 6. Results
- 7. Discussion
- 8. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 7. The importance of motivated comparisons in variationist studies: The importance of motivated comparisons in variationist studies
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The treatment of linguistic variants in previous work
- 3. Previous work on coda /s/ lenition in Spanish
- 4. Methodology: The variable and dataset
- 5. The case in Nicaragua
- 6. Models fitted to aspiration
- 7. Models fitted to deletion
- 8. Recommendation for treatment of the dependent variable
- 9. Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 8. The past persists into the present: A multivariate analysis of present perfect and preterite in Southern Arizona Spanish narratives
- 1. Background
- 2. The distribution of PP in Spanish varieties
- 3. Methodology and data
- 3.1 The envelop of variation
- 3.2 Data coding
- 4. Results
- 5. Analysis & discussion
- 6. Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 9. “El vos nuestro es, ¡Ey vos, chigüín!”: Honduran vos as a marker of national identity
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Sociopragmatic usage patterns of vos in Latin America
- 2.1 Río de la Plata
- 2.2 Central America
- 2.3 Honduras
- 3. A practical theory of nationalism
- 4. Methodology
- 5. Results and discussion of analysis
- 5.1 Vos as nonstandard norm
- 5.2 Vos as index of Honduran national identity
- 5.3 Innovative use of vos
- 5.4 Concluding remarks
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Part 2. Interacting grammars
- Chapter 10. Acquisition of articulatory control or language-specific coarticulatory patterns?: Evidence from the production of laterals in second-language Spanish
- Introduction
- 1. Background
- 1.1 Coarticulation
- 1.2 Coarticulation and the lateral
- 1.3 Coarticulation in second languages
- 2. Research questions and hypotheses
- 3. Method
- 3.1 Participants
- 3.2 Data elicitation
- 3.3 Acoustic analyses
- 3.4 Statistical analyses
- 4. Results
- 5. Discussion
- 6. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix A
- Appendix B
- Chapter 11. Voice onset time and the child foreign language learner of Spanish
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Literature review
- 2.1 VOT
- 2.2 L2/FL acquisition of VOT
- 3. Research design
- 3.1 Participants
- 3.2 Data collection and analysis
- 4. Results
- 4.1 Absolute VOT
- 4.2 Relative VOT
- 5. Discussion
- 6. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix
- Chapter 12. “Extraña uno lo que es la tortillas”: A preliminary study of number agreement in Spanish in contact with Purépecha
- Introduction
- 1. Background
- 1.1 Early second language acquisition
- 1.2 Contact varieties
- 1.3 The syntax and semantics of number, number features in Purépecha, and the mass/count distinction
- 1.4 Overview of number marking in contact varieties and SLA studies
- 2. The present study
- 2.1 Theoretical framework
- 2.2 Hypotheses
- 2.3 The informants
- 2.4 Data collection methodology
- 3. Results and discussion
- 3.1 Number agreement within the NP
- 3.2 Subject-verb agreement
- 3.3 Agreement in predication
- 4. Conclusions and future directions
- References
- Chapter 13. Mothers’ use of F0 after the first year of life in American English and Peninsular Spanish
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Present study
- 2.1 Research questions and hypotheses
- 3. Methods
- 3.1 Corpus and subjects
- 3.2 Coding and analysis
- 4. Results
- 4.1 Mean F0
- 4.2 F0 range
- 5. Discussion and conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix A
- Chapter 14. Extra-syntactic factors in the that-trace effect
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The that-trace effect
- 2.1 Extraction restrictions in Spanish and English
- 2.2 Syntactic accounts of the that-trace effect
- 2.3 Interface-based accounts
- 3. The Interface Hypothesis
- 4. Subject placement and the that-trace effect
- 5. Experiment 1
- 5.1 Methods
- 5.2 Results
- 6. Experiment 2
- 6.1 Methods
- 6.2 Results
- 6.3 Interim discussion
- 7. Experiment 3
- 7.1 Methods
- 7.2 Results
- 8. Discussion
- 9. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 15. An initial examination of imperfect subjunctive variation in Catalonian Spanish: A contact linguistics and usage-based approach
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Literature review
- 2.1 The Spanish imperfect subjunctive
- 2.2 The effects of cognates and structural priming
- 2.3 Theoretical frameworks
- 3. Method
- 4. Results
- 5. Discussion and conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Chapter 16. Testing English influence on first person singular “yo” subject pronoun expression in Sonoran Spanish
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Methodology
- 2.1 Participants
- 2.2 Data collection
- 3. Results
- 3.1 Hypothesis 1: Overall frequencies
- 3.2 Constraint hierarchy of the factor groups
- 3.3 Hypothesis 2: Loss of sensitivity to the switch reference constraint
- 3.4 Hypothesis 3: Clause type
- 3.5 Hypothesis 4: Community as a factor
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Appendix 1
- Index
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