In:Reconstructing Non-Standard Languages: A socially-anchored approach
Lenore A. Grenoble and Jessica Kantarovich
[IMPACT: Studies in Language, Culture and Society 52] 2022
► pp. 69–102
Chapter 3Sociolinguistics and the reconstruction of contact effects
Published online: 14 December 2022
https://doi.org/10.1075/impact.52.c3
https://doi.org/10.1075/impact.52.c3
Article outline
- 3.1Theoretical issues in determining contact-induced change
- 3.1.1Multiple causation
- 3.2Borrowing and code-mixing
- 3.2.1Entrenchment and nonce borrowings
- 3.2.2Borrowing hierarchies as diagnostics
- 3.3Contact and sociolinguistics at the “micro” and “macro” level
- 3.4Language shift, diglossia, and “fluent dysfluency”
- 3.4.1Features of diglossia
- 3.4.2Diglossia in documenting change and reconstruction
- 3.4.3Reconstructing a speech community: Diglossia vs. language shift
- 3.4.4Congruent lexicalization, interference, and interlanguage
- 3.4.5Odessan Russian
- 3.5The role of sociolinguistics in language contact
- 3.6Historical sociolinguistics: Reconstructing variation
- 3.6.1Social networks
- 3.7Conclusion
Notes
