Code-switching as a way of speaking - from language shift to language maintenance
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O'Shannessy, Carmel
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Michigan Publishing
Abstract
There has been considerable debate about the role of code-switching
practices in contact-induced language change, especially as
to whether they contribute to a path of language loss, and whether
they could lead to the emergence of mixed languages. But the role of
code-switching practices as a factor contributing to the maintenance
of a language has been discussed much less. In this chapter, I show
that although code-switching practices among one community of
speakers at first played a role in partial language shift through leading
to the emergence of a mixed language (O’Shannessy 2005, 2012, 2013),
a new configuration of code-switching practices assists in maintaining
aspects of the traditional language, by enabling verbs in the traditional
language to remain easily accessible to the speakers. The
new language, Light Warlpiri, uses few verbs from Warlpiri, and does
not include full Warlpiri morphology. Code-switching into Warlpiri
requires use of Warlpiri verbs and verbal morphology. Accessibility
of the lexical items and morphology is increased through increased
frequency of use, as higher-frequency items are more accessible and
easier to process than lower-frequency items (e.g., Becker 1979; Forster
1976; Levelt, Roelofs, and Meyer 1999; Morton 1976).
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Contact, Structure, and Change: A Festschrift in Honor of Sarah G. Thomason
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License
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