Replication data for: Possessive constructions in North Saami prose

We present an analysis of nearly 4K examples of possessive constructions extracted from nearly 0.7M words of North Saami prose representing works of authors born in three time periods (1870-1927, 1947-1957, 1972-1983), plus a recent (1998) translation of the New Testament. The examples document an o...

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Main Authors: Antonsen, Lene, Janda, Laura A.
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: DataverseNO 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:93871780a5f5b89ac5e45d236a048935f24ab4c47134fad1455e7094c1b3f1a7
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author Antonsen, Lene
Janda, Laura A.
author_facet Antonsen, Lene
Janda, Laura A.
author_sort Antonsen, Lene
collection DataverseNO (via DataONE)
description We present an analysis of nearly 4K examples of possessive constructions extracted from nearly 0.7M words of North Saami prose representing works of authors born in three time periods (1870-1927, 1947-1957, 1972-1983), plus a recent (1998) translation of the New Testament. The examples document an ongoing language change in which the possessive suffix attached to a noun (“SOG”) is being replaced by the genitive reflexive pronoun preceding the noun (“ieža-”). All examples are hand tagged for the two constructions, SOG vs. ieža-, plus a host of variables including the case and semantic class of the possessum and possessor, the person and number of the possessor, the source of the example, and the generation and geographical location of the author. In addition to anaphoric, endophoric, and exophoric reference previously described, we discover a generic type of reference. We track the progress of the language change across generations and find Johan Turi exceptional because he used ieža- more than his contemporaries. We focus particularly on examples of double marking of possession, and on examples where the number of the possessive construction does not match the possessor, and on the case and semantic class of possessor and possessum. It appears that semantics play a greater role in the choice of possessive constructions for the middle and young er generations than for the older generation. We hypothesize that the greater morphological complexity of the SOG construction is a language-internal factor that has contributed to its decline.
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spelling dataone:sha256:93871780a5f5b89ac5e45d236a048935f24ab4c47134fad1455e7094c1b3f1a7 2025-06-03T18:50:03+00:00 Replication data for: Possessive constructions in North Saami prose Antonsen, Lene Janda, Laura A. 2015-11-25T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:93871780a5f5b89ac5e45d236a048935f24ab4c47134fad1455e7094c1b3f1a7 unknown DataverseNO Arts and Humanities possessive constructions Time-depth: diachronic Topic: affixes North Saami syntax language change possessive suffixes Field: Morphology Dataset 2015 dataone:urn:node:DVNO 2025-06-03T18:08:22Z We present an analysis of nearly 4K examples of possessive constructions extracted from nearly 0.7M words of North Saami prose representing works of authors born in three time periods (1870-1927, 1947-1957, 1972-1983), plus a recent (1998) translation of the New Testament. The examples document an ongoing language change in which the possessive suffix attached to a noun (“SOG”) is being replaced by the genitive reflexive pronoun preceding the noun (“ieža-”). All examples are hand tagged for the two constructions, SOG vs. ieža-, plus a host of variables including the case and semantic class of the possessum and possessor, the person and number of the possessor, the source of the example, and the generation and geographical location of the author. In addition to anaphoric, endophoric, and exophoric reference previously described, we discover a generic type of reference. We track the progress of the language change across generations and find Johan Turi exceptional because he used ieža- more than his contemporaries. We focus particularly on examples of double marking of possession, and on examples where the number of the possessive construction does not match the possessor, and on the case and semantic class of possessor and possessum. It appears that semantics play a greater role in the choice of possessive constructions for the middle and young er generations than for the older generation. We hypothesize that the greater morphological complexity of the SOG construction is a language-internal factor that has contributed to its decline. Dataset saami DataverseNO (via DataONE) Sog ENVELOPE(-20.972,-20.972,63.993,63.993)
spellingShingle Arts and Humanities
possessive constructions
Time-depth: diachronic
Topic: affixes
North Saami
syntax
language change
possessive suffixes
Field: Morphology
Antonsen, Lene
Janda, Laura A.
Replication data for: Possessive constructions in North Saami prose
title Replication data for: Possessive constructions in North Saami prose
title_full Replication data for: Possessive constructions in North Saami prose
title_fullStr Replication data for: Possessive constructions in North Saami prose
title_full_unstemmed Replication data for: Possessive constructions in North Saami prose
title_short Replication data for: Possessive constructions in North Saami prose
title_sort replication data for: possessive constructions in north saami prose
topic Arts and Humanities
possessive constructions
Time-depth: diachronic
Topic: affixes
North Saami
syntax
language change
possessive suffixes
Field: Morphology
topic_facet Arts and Humanities
possessive constructions
Time-depth: diachronic
Topic: affixes
North Saami
syntax
language change
possessive suffixes
Field: Morphology
url https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:93871780a5f5b89ac5e45d236a048935f24ab4c47134fad1455e7094c1b3f1a7