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Publication Date:
19 08 2011
ISSN:
1613-7035
DOI:
10.1515/cllt.2011.011

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Editor-in-Chief: Gries, Stefan Th.

2 Issues per year

IMPACT FACTOR 2010: 0.600
ERIH category 2011: INT2

The dative alternation in African American English: Researching syntactic variation and change across sociolinguistic datasets

1Assistant professor of linguistics at the University of Oregon.

2Sadie Dernham Patek Professor Emerita in Humanities at Stanford University and Senior Researcher at the Center for the Study of Language and Information.

3Canada Research Chair in Regional Language and Oral Text at Memorial University of Newfoundland.

Citation Information: Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory. Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages 229–244, ISSN (Online) 1613-7035, ISSN (Print) 1613-7027, DOI: 10.1515/cllt.2011.011, August 2011

Publication History: Published Online: 26/02/2012

Abstract

Recent research has shown the dative alternation in English to be a productive arena for examining the relationship between group-level variation and the internalization of individuals' grammars. Experimental methods (e.g., Bresnan and Ford, Language 86: 168–213, 2010) and the analysis of large published corpora (e.g., Bresnan et al., Predicting the dative alternation, Amsterdam, 2007) have revealed subtle cross-dialect differences for this variable. The current paper seeks to improve our understanding of this feature and its bearings on experience-based models of grammar by examining African American English (AAE) data from sociolinguistic interviews and from historical letters written by semi-literate ex-slaves. We also consider some methodological problems of conducting corpus-like analyses on non-standard varieties.

Keywords:: syntactic variation ; dative alternation ; African American English ; sociolinguistics

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