
handle: 2066/143608
Adopting the idea of bilingual optimization strategies and a usage-based framework, this dissertation explores contact-induced language change in Papiamento and Turkish in contact with Dutch and vice versa. Multilingualism carries with it the potential for personal, economic and social wealth. People who speak multiple languages tend to be creative and innovative people who manage multiple linguistic (re)sources. Multilingualism is very important in our modern world and has been shown to have cognitive benefits. Psycholinguistic research indicates that the two languages of a bilingual speaker are jointly active and can influence each other during language processing. This can eventually lead to language convergence and change, which is often found to be the grammatical outcome of language contact in multilingual settings. Turkish and Papiamento spoken in the Netherlands show signs of language change as a result of contact with Dutch. Speakers use "Netherlands-like ', 'Turkish-like' and 'Papiamento-like' sentences. Just as humans have an impressive ability to adapt to their surroundings, the results of this study show that this is also seen in language. This dissertation is a collection of four studies which use several psycholinguistic and sociolinguistic research methods to investigate various aspects of contact-induced language change in the speech of Turkish- Dutch and Papiamento-Dutch bilinguals. It presents the first cross-linguistic study of structural linguistic changes in two minority languages in the Netherlands, and provides a link between sociolinguistic corpus-based research on how contact and change unfold, and psycholinguistic experimental research on the cognitive mechanisms that underlie this process. While combining corpus results with experimental validation is gaining the status of a methodological standard in Cognitive Linguistics, it is still relatively new in contact linguistics
Contains fulltext : 143608.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)
Promotores : Muysken, P.C., Backus, A.M., Indefrey, P.
Radboud University, 15 oktober 2015
VIII, 229 p.
Language in Society, Languages in Contact
Language in Society, Languages in Contact
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