Constructional change in North American Danish transitional verbs: The case of var født/konfirmeret/gift

Karoline Kühl

Abstract

This paper focuses on structural changes in Danish as an immigrant minority language in North America, i.e., language change under the conditions of language contact. Two corpora, the Corpus of North American Danish and the LANCHART corpus (both University of Copenhagen), provide data for a contrastive analysis of auxiliary choice in three verb phrases with transitional biographical verbs (født 'born', konfirmeret 'confirmed' and gift 'married') in North American Danish and modern spoken Danish. Taking a Construction Grammar approach, the author argues that the changes in auxiliary choice, namely the use of var 'was' instead of blev 'became', are the result of cross-linguistic analogy building by the bilingual speakers of North American Danish. The analogical leveling of North American Danish with English leads to constructional change in form and function as well as in frequency and prototype.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationSelected proceedings of the 8th Workshop on Immigrant Languages in the Americas, 2017
EditorsKaroline Kühl, Jan Heegård Petersen, Janne Bondi Johannessen, Michael Putnam
Number of pages8
Place of PublicationSomerville, MA, USA
PublisherCascadilla
Publication date2018
Pages63-70
Publication statusPublished - 2018
SeriesCascadilla Proceedings Project

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