In:Constructions across Grammars
Edited by Martin Hilpert and Jan-Ola Östman
[Benjamins Current Topics 82] 2016
► pp. 169–201
Constructions do not cross Languages
On cross-linguistic generalizations of constructions
Published online: 22 March 2016
https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.82.07was
https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.82.07was
In research on bilingualism it is often assumed that linguistic structures can be shared across languages. The emphasis on generalization and categorization in construction grammar also seems to imply that speakers can develop cross-linguistic representations. This contribution argues that generalizations can occur only on the semantic level. Data from typologically distinct languages shows that generalizations over form are not likely to play a role in language processing. It is further argued that neither syntactical nor grammatical form is needed in order to explain syntactic transfer.
Keywords: bilingualism, code-switching, construction grammar, Finno-Ugric, imitation, Slavic, transfer
Cited by (1)
Cited by one other publication
Wiesinger, Evelyn
2025. Language contact and creolization. In Constructions in Contact 3 [Constructional Approaches to Language, 40], ► pp. 111 ff.
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