Gender Change in Norwegian Dialects: Comprehension is affected before Production
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/10728Date
2016-10-04Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
This article investigates language variation and change in the grammatical gender system of
Norwegian, where feminine gender agreement is in the process of disappearing in some Northern
Norwegian dialects. Speakers of the Tromsø (
N
= 46) and Sortland (
N
= 54) dialects participated in a Visual
Word experiment. The task examined whether they used indefinite articles (
en
,
ei
,
et
) predictively to identify
nouns during spoken-word recognition, and whether they produced feminine articles in an elicited production
task. Results show that all speakers used the neuter indefinite article
et
as a predictive cue, but no speakers
used the feminine
ei
predictively, regardless of whether they produced it or not. The masculine article
en
was
used predictively only by the speakers who did not produce feminine gender forms. We hypothesize that in
dialects where the feminine gender is disappearing, this change in the gender system affects comprehension
first, even before speakers stop producing the feminine indefinite article.
Description
Publisher
variationDe Gruyter. Linguistics Vanguard