Prepositional phrases and case in North American (heritage) Icelandic
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24370Date
2021-09-15Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The paper investigates the use of PPs, specifically prepositions and the case marking on their DP
arguments, in moribund North American (heritage) Icelandic (NAmIce), using data from a map
task experiment. Since prepositional phrases combine semantic properties with morphosyntactic properties, PPs allow us to investigate the relative vulnerability of both domains at once.
Our results show that while the prepositional inventory of NAmIce is not reduced as compared
to Modern Icelandic, the choice of prepositions is subject to crosslinguistic influence from the
dominant language English. For case, we find an increase in the use of nominative and accusative
case at the expense of the dative; prepositions may take over case functions too. Our results are in
line with previous research on case in heritage languages as well as studies on language change,
while partially contradicting the assumption that loss is reversely related to acquisition.
Publisher
Cambridge University PressCitation
Dehé, Kupisch T. Prepositional phrases and case in North American (heritage) Icelandic. Nordic Journal of Linguistics. 2021Metadata
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