Dialect separation and cross-dialectal influence: a study on the grammatical gender of Oromo
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34888Date
2024-05-03Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Feleke, Tekabe LegesseAbstract
The extent to which the grammar of one dialect influences the grammar
of another and the mechanisms that bidialectal speakers employ to distinguish a
target grammar from non-target grammar have not been adequately investigated.
In this study, we elucidate these issues by investigating the grammatical gender
of Oromo, a Cushitic language that is spoken in Ethiopia. The results from two
successive offline experiments indicate that Oromo bidialectal speakers can
differentiate between the grammar of their native dialect and that of a non-native
dialect in both spoken and written modes. This finding implies the existence of a
dual-system representation of grammar. Moreover, there is a significant amount of
dialect mixing that varies across various developmental stages and modalities. The
bidialectal speakers’ ability to differentiate between the grammar of their native
dialect and that of a non-native dialect is constrained by the magnitude of
their exposure to the non-native dialect, modalities, and a specific property of
grammatical forms. Here, we propose an interactive dialect separation model that
accounts for diverse dialect contexts.
Publisher
de GruyterCitation
Feleke. Dialect separation and cross-dialectal influence: a study on the grammatical gender of Oromo. Linguistics. 2024Metadata
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Copyright 2024 The Author(s)