Nonstandard Use of the “Reflexive” Affix - s j a in Russian Speech of Bilingual Speakers of Northern Siberia and the Russian Far East
One of the features of the oral Russian speech of bilingual speakers of the indigenous languages of Russia is the omission/the overuse of the “reflexive” affix - s j a (a “middle voice” marker with a wide range of uses including reflexive, reciprocal, anticausative, passive, and some others). We dis...
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ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:086590791503445393921d2a486c41ed 2023-05-15T16:06:11+02:00 Nonstandard Use of the “Reflexive” Affix - s j a in Russian Speech of Bilingual Speakers of Northern Siberia and the Russian Far East Irina Khomchenkova Polina Pleshak Natalia Stoynova 2019-06-01T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.3390/languages4020039 https://doaj.org/article/086590791503445393921d2a486c41ed EN eng MDPI AG https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/4/2/39 https://doaj.org/toc/2226-471X 2226-471X doi:10.3390/languages4020039 https://doaj.org/article/086590791503445393921d2a486c41ed Languages, Vol 4, Iss 2, p 39 (2019) bilingualism language contact pattern borrowing Russian Samoyedic languages Tungusic languages reflexive valency changing middle voice Language and Literature P article 2019 ftdoajarticles https://doi.org/10.3390/languages4020039 2022-12-30T22:29:25Z One of the features of the oral Russian speech of bilingual speakers of the indigenous languages of Russia is the omission/the overuse of the “reflexive” affix - s j a (a “middle voice” marker with a wide range of uses including reflexive, reciprocal, anticausative, passive, and some others). We discuss the data on the nonstandard use of - s j a in the Russian speech of bilingual speakers of two language groups that differ both from Russian and from each other in this grammatical domain: Samoyedic (Forest Enets, Nganasan, and Nenets) and Tungusic (Nanai and Ulch). The data come from the corpus of contact-influenced Russian speech, which is being created by our team. We show that the mismatches in standard and nonstandard usage cannot be explained by direct structural copying from the donor language (indigenous) to the recipient one (the local variety of Russian). Nor is there a consistent system which differs from standard Russian since there are many more usages that follow the rules of standard Russian. The influence of the indigenous languages explains some overuses and omissions; the others can be explained by other factors, e.g., difficulties in the acquisition of verb pairs with non-transparent semantic or syntactic relations. Article in Journal/Newspaper Enets nenets Nganasan* samoyed* Tungusic languages Siberia Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles Languages 4 2 39 |
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bilingualism language contact pattern borrowing Russian Samoyedic languages Tungusic languages reflexive valency changing middle voice Language and Literature P |
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bilingualism language contact pattern borrowing Russian Samoyedic languages Tungusic languages reflexive valency changing middle voice Language and Literature P Irina Khomchenkova Polina Pleshak Natalia Stoynova Nonstandard Use of the “Reflexive” Affix - s j a in Russian Speech of Bilingual Speakers of Northern Siberia and the Russian Far East |
topic_facet |
bilingualism language contact pattern borrowing Russian Samoyedic languages Tungusic languages reflexive valency changing middle voice Language and Literature P |
description |
One of the features of the oral Russian speech of bilingual speakers of the indigenous languages of Russia is the omission/the overuse of the “reflexive” affix - s j a (a “middle voice” marker with a wide range of uses including reflexive, reciprocal, anticausative, passive, and some others). We discuss the data on the nonstandard use of - s j a in the Russian speech of bilingual speakers of two language groups that differ both from Russian and from each other in this grammatical domain: Samoyedic (Forest Enets, Nganasan, and Nenets) and Tungusic (Nanai and Ulch). The data come from the corpus of contact-influenced Russian speech, which is being created by our team. We show that the mismatches in standard and nonstandard usage cannot be explained by direct structural copying from the donor language (indigenous) to the recipient one (the local variety of Russian). Nor is there a consistent system which differs from standard Russian since there are many more usages that follow the rules of standard Russian. The influence of the indigenous languages explains some overuses and omissions; the others can be explained by other factors, e.g., difficulties in the acquisition of verb pairs with non-transparent semantic or syntactic relations. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Irina Khomchenkova Polina Pleshak Natalia Stoynova |
author_facet |
Irina Khomchenkova Polina Pleshak Natalia Stoynova |
author_sort |
Irina Khomchenkova |
title |
Nonstandard Use of the “Reflexive” Affix - s j a in Russian Speech of Bilingual Speakers of Northern Siberia and the Russian Far East |
title_short |
Nonstandard Use of the “Reflexive” Affix - s j a in Russian Speech of Bilingual Speakers of Northern Siberia and the Russian Far East |
title_full |
Nonstandard Use of the “Reflexive” Affix - s j a in Russian Speech of Bilingual Speakers of Northern Siberia and the Russian Far East |
title_fullStr |
Nonstandard Use of the “Reflexive” Affix - s j a in Russian Speech of Bilingual Speakers of Northern Siberia and the Russian Far East |
title_full_unstemmed |
Nonstandard Use of the “Reflexive” Affix - s j a in Russian Speech of Bilingual Speakers of Northern Siberia and the Russian Far East |
title_sort |
nonstandard use of the “reflexive” affix - s j a in russian speech of bilingual speakers of northern siberia and the russian far east |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
https://doi.org/10.3390/languages4020039 https://doaj.org/article/086590791503445393921d2a486c41ed |
genre |
Enets nenets Nganasan* samoyed* Tungusic languages Siberia |
genre_facet |
Enets nenets Nganasan* samoyed* Tungusic languages Siberia |
op_source |
Languages, Vol 4, Iss 2, p 39 (2019) |
op_relation |
https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/4/2/39 https://doaj.org/toc/2226-471X 2226-471X doi:10.3390/languages4020039 https://doaj.org/article/086590791503445393921d2a486c41ed |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/10.3390/languages4020039 |
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39 |
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