Home Linguistics & Semiotics Chapter 3. The alternation between standard and vernacular pronouns by Belgian Dutch parents in child-oriented control acts
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Chapter 3. The alternation between standard and vernacular pronouns by Belgian Dutch parents in child-oriented control acts

  • Eline Zenner and Dorien Van De Mieroop
View more publications by John Benjamins Publishing Company

Abstract

This paper studies the social meaning of standard and vernacular pronouns of address in Dutch by zooming in on the position they hold in parents’ control acts to their children. Linking the hyperstandardized linguistic situation in Flanders with the Western-European ideal of democratic parenting, we expect to find that the standard forms are more typically connected to more indirect, softer control acts. This hypothesis is tested through a mixed method approach, where quantitative and qualitative analyses are used to chart the choices of ten Belgian Dutch parents when issuing directives to their children. Studying 452 pronouns we identify a clear link between the choice of variety and parameters such as type of control act, repetition, mitigation and boosting and type of pronoun, with ‘irritation’ as mediating factor.

Abstract

This paper studies the social meaning of standard and vernacular pronouns of address in Dutch by zooming in on the position they hold in parents’ control acts to their children. Linking the hyperstandardized linguistic situation in Flanders with the Western-European ideal of democratic parenting, we expect to find that the standard forms are more typically connected to more indirect, softer control acts. This hypothesis is tested through a mixed method approach, where quantitative and qualitative analyses are used to chart the choices of ten Belgian Dutch parents when issuing directives to their children. Studying 452 pronouns we identify a clear link between the choice of variety and parameters such as type of control act, repetition, mitigation and boosting and type of pronoun, with ‘irritation’ as mediating factor.

Downloaded on 20.10.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1075/silv.26.03zen/html
Scroll to top button