The Tale of Two Lexicons: Decomposing Complexity across a Distributed Lexicon
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23135Date
2021-11-10Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The notion of complexity is evasive and often left to intuition, yet it is often invoked when studying heritage language grammars. In this article, we propose a first pass at decomposing the notion of complexity into smaller components in a formal grammatical model. In particular, we argue that a distributed model of the lexicon (i.e., one that assumes that principles that generate both words and phrases are one and the same) allows us to identify three components: syntactic features, the hierarchical organization of features, and the mapping between syntactic features and their exponents. Based on grammatical gender in different language pairs, in particular the heritage language American Norwegian (AmNo), we illustrate how this distributed model can account for developments in heritage language grammars whereby the grammatical gender system is considered to have become less complex. More generally, the article demonstrates that a distributed architecture is better suited empirically and theoretically as a heuristic to understand complexity effects in heritage grammars and beyond.
Publisher
BrillCitation
Lohndal T, Putnam MT. The Tale of Two Lexicons: Decomposing Complexity across a Distributed Lexicon. Heritage Language Journal. 2021;18:1-29Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2021 The Author(s)