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Publication Date:
19 10 2011
ISSN:
1614-7308
DOI:
10.1515/flin.2011.011

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Folia Linguistica

Acta Societatis Linguisticae Europaeae

Editor-in-Chief: Fanego, Teresa / Ritt, Nikolaus

2 Issues per year

Folia Linguistica
Increased IMPACT FACTOR 2010: 0.682
Rank 63 out of 141 in category Linguistics in the 2010 Thomson Reuters Journal Citation Report/Social Sciences Edition


Folia Linguistica Historica

IMPACT FACTOR 2010: 0.083
5-year IMPACT FACTOR: 0.108


ERIH category 2011: INT2

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Dutch gender and the locus of morphological regularization

1Université de Liège, Département de Langues et littératures modernes, Service de langue néerlandaise, 3–5, Place Cockerill (Bât. A2), B-4000 Liège, Belgium

2University of Münster, Department of Dutch Philology, Alter Steinweg 6/7, D-48143 Münster, Germany

Citation Information: Folia Linguistica. Volume 45, Issue 2, Pages 245–281, ISSN (Online) 1614-7308, ISSN (Print) 0165-4004, DOI: 10.1515/flin.2011.011, October 2011

Publication History: Published Online: 26/02/2012

The Dutch pronominal gender system is believed to be undergoing a process of resemanticization. While most research has focused on northern varieties of Dutch which are ahead in the change, this article describes the ongoing demise of the traditional three-gender system and the incipient resemanticization of pronominal gender in a southern variety of Dutch. This process can be considered an instance of morphological regularization – that is, the rise of an innovative rule system when the traditional system becomes too opaque to be successfully acquired. Resemanticization takes effect along cross-linguistically widely attested lines (the Agreement Hierarchy), using parameters that are typologically common in gender systems, such as animacy or individuation. It is argued that the locus of language change is the language acquisition process: indeed deviations from grammatical gender in adults are typically in line with the semantic system for pronominal reference that is found in young children. As children grow older and their lexicon expands, these semantic rules which categorically determine their pronominal reference at the age of three are turned into default rules, which mainly apply in cases where there is uncertainty concerning a noun's grammatical gender, for example, for infrequent nouns.

Keywords:: Dutch; grammatical gender; semantic gender; resemanticization; language acquisition; language change

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