Replication Data for: Davvisámi earutkeahtes oamasteapmi

This data shows the correlation analysis for our study with this description: On the basis of corpus data (9.5M words 1997-2010) we claim that North Saami is developing a grammatical distinction between alienable and inalienable possession. In previous work we documented a language change in North S...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Janda, Laura A, Antonsen, Lene
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: DataverseNO 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:40a649a8df38225fb9633c4ac68a5caff13973d281d95925c972b5ee68968630
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author Janda, Laura A
Antonsen, Lene
author_facet Janda, Laura A
Antonsen, Lene
author_sort Janda, Laura A
collection DataverseNO (via DataONE)
description This data shows the correlation analysis for our study with this description: On the basis of corpus data (9.5M words 1997-2010) we claim that North Saami is developing a grammatical distinction between alienable and inalienable possession. In previous work we documented a language change in North Saami in which the possessive suffix (“SOG”) as in girjji-id-easkka [book-ACC.PL-3PL] ‘their books’ is being replaced by an analytic construction with the reflexive genitive ieža-form, as in iežaska girjjiid ‘their books’. According to typologists, alienable/inalienable distinctions arise primarily in small languages where a language change takes place, and inalienability is marked by the synthetic construction. North Saami possessive constructions comport with these features, and SOG tends to mark inalienable possession, as opposed to the more neutral and widespread ieža-form. Statistical analysis shows that word frequency cannot account for the distribution of SOG vs. ieža-form, justifying focus on semantics. North Saami shows high frequency of SOG for kinship and body part nouns associated with inalienability cross-linguistically, but in addition extends this category to words for friends. A new finding is the strong presence of SOG with words for products and experiences, and additionally words connected with identity and way of life. SOG is productive lexically and morphologically, and used in multiple collocations.
format Dataset
genre saami
genre_facet saami
geographic Sog
geographic_facet Sog
id dataone:sha256:40a649a8df38225fb9633c4ac68a5caff13973d281d95925c972b5ee68968630
institution Open Polar
language unknown
long_lat ENVELOPE(-20.972,-20.972,63.993,63.993)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:DVNO
op_coverage BEGINDATE: 1997-01-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2010-01-01T00:00:00Z
publishDate 2020
publisher DataverseNO
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:sha256:40a649a8df38225fb9633c4ac68a5caff13973d281d95925c972b5ee68968630 2025-06-03T18:50:03+00:00 Replication Data for: Davvisámi earutkeahtes oamasteapmi Janda, Laura A Antonsen, Lene BEGINDATE: 1997-01-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2010-01-01T00:00:00Z 2020-04-15T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:40a649a8df38225fb9633c4ac68a5caff13973d281d95925c972b5ee68968630 unknown DataverseNO inalienability word frequency language change possessive construction North Saami semantics Arts and Humanities Dataset 2020 dataone:urn:node:DVNO 2025-06-03T18:17:28Z This data shows the correlation analysis for our study with this description: On the basis of corpus data (9.5M words 1997-2010) we claim that North Saami is developing a grammatical distinction between alienable and inalienable possession. In previous work we documented a language change in North Saami in which the possessive suffix (“SOG”) as in girjji-id-easkka [book-ACC.PL-3PL] ‘their books’ is being replaced by an analytic construction with the reflexive genitive ieža-form, as in iežaska girjjiid ‘their books’. According to typologists, alienable/inalienable distinctions arise primarily in small languages where a language change takes place, and inalienability is marked by the synthetic construction. North Saami possessive constructions comport with these features, and SOG tends to mark inalienable possession, as opposed to the more neutral and widespread ieža-form. Statistical analysis shows that word frequency cannot account for the distribution of SOG vs. ieža-form, justifying focus on semantics. North Saami shows high frequency of SOG for kinship and body part nouns associated with inalienability cross-linguistically, but in addition extends this category to words for friends. A new finding is the strong presence of SOG with words for products and experiences, and additionally words connected with identity and way of life. SOG is productive lexically and morphologically, and used in multiple collocations. Dataset saami DataverseNO (via DataONE) Sog ENVELOPE(-20.972,-20.972,63.993,63.993)
spellingShingle inalienability
word frequency
language change
possessive construction
North Saami
semantics
Arts and Humanities
Janda, Laura A
Antonsen, Lene
Replication Data for: Davvisámi earutkeahtes oamasteapmi
title Replication Data for: Davvisámi earutkeahtes oamasteapmi
title_full Replication Data for: Davvisámi earutkeahtes oamasteapmi
title_fullStr Replication Data for: Davvisámi earutkeahtes oamasteapmi
title_full_unstemmed Replication Data for: Davvisámi earutkeahtes oamasteapmi
title_short Replication Data for: Davvisámi earutkeahtes oamasteapmi
title_sort replication data for: davvisámi earutkeahtes oamasteapmi
topic inalienability
word frequency
language change
possessive construction
North Saami
semantics
Arts and Humanities
topic_facet inalienability
word frequency
language change
possessive construction
North Saami
semantics
Arts and Humanities
url https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:40a649a8df38225fb9633c4ac68a5caff13973d281d95925c972b5ee68968630