Book contents
- The Cambridge Handbook of Language Contact
- Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics
- The Cambridge Handbook of Language Contact
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Maps Volume II
- Figures Volume II
- Tables Volume II
- Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part One Multilingualism
- Part Two Contact, Emergence, and Language Classification
- 10 Perspectives on Creole Formation
- 11 Non-European Pidgins in Early European Colonial Explorations and Trade: Mobilian Jargon and Maritime Polynesian Pidgin in Contrast
- 12 Mixed Languages
- 13 Reconstructing the Sociolinguistic History of Expansion Languages in the Americas: A Research Program
- 14 On the Idiolectal Nature of Lexical and Phonological Contact: Spaniards, Nahuas, and Yorubas in the New World
- Part Three Lingua Francas
- Part Four Language Vitality
- Part Five Contact and Language Structures
- Author Index
- Language Index
- Subject Index
- References
14 - On the Idiolectal Nature of Lexical and Phonological Contact: Spaniards, Nahuas, and Yorubas in the New World
from Part Two - Contact, Emergence, and Language Classification
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 June 2022
- The Cambridge Handbook of Language Contact
- Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics
- The Cambridge Handbook of Language Contact
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Maps Volume II
- Figures Volume II
- Tables Volume II
- Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part One Multilingualism
- Part Two Contact, Emergence, and Language Classification
- 10 Perspectives on Creole Formation
- 11 Non-European Pidgins in Early European Colonial Explorations and Trade: Mobilian Jargon and Maritime Polynesian Pidgin in Contrast
- 12 Mixed Languages
- 13 Reconstructing the Sociolinguistic History of Expansion Languages in the Americas: A Research Program
- 14 On the Idiolectal Nature of Lexical and Phonological Contact: Spaniards, Nahuas, and Yorubas in the New World
- Part Three Lingua Francas
- Part Four Language Vitality
- Part Five Contact and Language Structures
- Author Index
- Language Index
- Subject Index
- References
Summary
Linguists usually study the consequences of the sixteenth-century invasion of Mexico and the Caribbean by Castile through the constructs of the language (Nahuatl, Spanish, Yoruba, etc.) and the dialectitalic (Old Castilian, Andalusian, New World koine, pluridialectalism, etc.) and in terms of the contactitalic between these constructs. In contrast, contact is studied here at the level of individual speakers whose inventories of lexical and structural features change and evolve, as new features from other speakers are differentially acquired. These disaggregated processes crucially involve inter-speaker and intra-speaker variation dependent in part on the different frequencies of lexical exemplars. We stress the socially invented nature of named communal languages and argue that our focus on variable contact between idiolects and the disaggregated conception of lexical exemplars can overcome theoretical limitations that are unavoidable when contact is seen in terms of languages and dialects. The data come primarily from the well-documented history of Castilian /s/ in so-called loan phonology in sixteenth-century New Spain, supplemented by a secondary look at nineteenth-century Cuba.
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- The Cambridge Handbook of Language ContactVolume 2: Multilingualism in Population Structure, pp. 370 - 400Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022