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Publication Date:
19 10 2011
ISSN:
1614-7308
DOI:
10.1515/flin.2011.014

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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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The interaction of gender and declension in Germanic languages

1University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Lehrstuhl Germanistische Sprachwissenschaft, Bismarckstr. 6, D-91054 Erlangen, Germany

2University of Mainz, FB 05 – Deutsches Institut, D-55099 Mainz, Germany

Citation Information: Folia Linguistica. Volume 45, Issue 2, Pages 355–388, ISSN (Online) 1614-7308, ISSN (Print) 0165-4004, DOI: 10.1515/flin.2011.014, October 2011

Publication History: Published Online: 26/02/2012

In the Germanic languages, gender and declension are two classification systems with a restricted functional load. Still, both persist in many languages, and in some of these languages they are even intimately interrelated, i.e. gender can be predicted based on declension, or declension can be predicted based on gender. Several Germanic languages and dialectal varieties of German are compared with respect to this link between gender and declension. Based on contrastive data, the interaction seems to depend on the level of complexity, i.e. the number of declensions and genders. When complexity decreases, the conditioning of both categorization systems is either more strongly interrelated (leading to parallelization in the most extreme cases), or gender and declension are dissociated and bound to new, more transparent conditioning factors. The developments are interpreted against the background of the hypothesis that gender and declension are used complementarily in profiling the number category: gender profiles the singular, whereas declension profiles the plural.

Keywords:: declension; gender; Germanic languages; German; inflectional morphology

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