Chapter 1. Discontinuous Plurality in Chilean Spanish
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Rachel Christensen
Abstract
This work proposes an analysis to account for a discontinuous construction in Chilean Spanish resulting in plural inflectional morphology on the corresponding verb. In contrast with a plural DP or a conjunction of two singular DPs, this construction combines a bundle of Φ features, licensed by an Operator Phrase, and a DP that is introduced by a with-phrase. This study provides the first analysis of this agreement pattern in Chilean Spanish and introduces new empirical data that distinguishes Chilean from other Spanish varieties. Research addresses the distinctions of this Chilean construction and expands on previous theories of plural agreement, i.e., Plural Pronoun Construction and Comitative Coordination (Vassilieva, 2005; Camacho, 1996) to account for a wider array of linguistic variety.
Abstract
This work proposes an analysis to account for a discontinuous construction in Chilean Spanish resulting in plural inflectional morphology on the corresponding verb. In contrast with a plural DP or a conjunction of two singular DPs, this construction combines a bundle of Φ features, licensed by an Operator Phrase, and a DP that is introduced by a with-phrase. This study provides the first analysis of this agreement pattern in Chilean Spanish and introduces new empirical data that distinguishes Chilean from other Spanish varieties. Research addresses the distinctions of this Chilean construction and expands on previous theories of plural agreement, i.e., Plural Pronoun Construction and Comitative Coordination (Vassilieva, 2005; Camacho, 1996) to account for a wider array of linguistic variety.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Acknowledgements ix
- Introduction 1
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Part 1. Regional variation
- Chapter 1. Discontinuous Plurality in Chilean Spanish 14
- Chapter 2. Person restrictions in non-canonical agreement patterns in Spanish 34
- Chapter 3. Exploring future-in-the-past variation in Seville and Caracas 58
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Part 2. Diachronic variation
- Chapter 4. Derived verbs and future-conditional stem regularization in written Spanish in synchrony and diachrony 82
- Chapter 5. The emergence of sound change in two varieties of Spanish 106
- Chapter 6. Real and apparent (time) changes in Yucatan Spanish 130
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Part 3. Learner profile variation
- Chapter 7. Civics, ideology, and Spanish in Kansas 154
- Chapter 8. Promoting Spanish L2 pragmatic competence in a virtual environment 173
- Chapter 9. Individual differences do not affect trill variation by advanced learners of Spanish 196
- Chapter 10. L2 sociolinguistic perception of stylistic variation 225
- Index 249
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Acknowledgements ix
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1. Regional variation
- Chapter 1. Discontinuous Plurality in Chilean Spanish 14
- Chapter 2. Person restrictions in non-canonical agreement patterns in Spanish 34
- Chapter 3. Exploring future-in-the-past variation in Seville and Caracas 58
-
Part 2. Diachronic variation
- Chapter 4. Derived verbs and future-conditional stem regularization in written Spanish in synchrony and diachrony 82
- Chapter 5. The emergence of sound change in two varieties of Spanish 106
- Chapter 6. Real and apparent (time) changes in Yucatan Spanish 130
-
Part 3. Learner profile variation
- Chapter 7. Civics, ideology, and Spanish in Kansas 154
- Chapter 8. Promoting Spanish L2 pragmatic competence in a virtual environment 173
- Chapter 9. Individual differences do not affect trill variation by advanced learners of Spanish 196
- Chapter 10. L2 sociolinguistic perception of stylistic variation 225
- Index 249