Home Linguistics & Semiotics 21. Language loss in spatial semantics: Dene Sųłiné
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

21. Language loss in spatial semantics: Dene Sųłiné

  • Martin Thiering
View more publications by John Benjamins Publishing Company

Abstract

This paper presents a cognitive semantic description of the ongoing process of language loss in the encoding of spatial topological relations in a Northern Athapaskan language, Dene Sųłiné. Using the Topological Relation Markers elicitation tool (Pederson, Wilkins & Bowerman 1998), results are presented that show a difference in the encoding of spatial topological relations between younger and elder speakers. This difference becomes visible through selected data points that show elder speakers encoding spatial topological relations on a higher degree of specificity than younger speakers. This is reflected by a larger inventory of morpho-syntactic and semantic choices. In addition, younger speakers produce rather restricted and often ungrammatical utterances; their inventory for linguistic variety is limited or simply not available. As I will argue in this paper, this limitation is due to ongoing language loss and the influence of English as the dominant way to communicate.

Abstract

This paper presents a cognitive semantic description of the ongoing process of language loss in the encoding of spatial topological relations in a Northern Athapaskan language, Dene Sųłiné. Using the Topological Relation Markers elicitation tool (Pederson, Wilkins & Bowerman 1998), results are presented that show a difference in the encoding of spatial topological relations between younger and elder speakers. This difference becomes visible through selected data points that show elder speakers encoding spatial topological relations on a higher degree of specificity than younger speakers. This is reflected by a larger inventory of morpho-syntactic and semantic choices. In addition, younger speakers produce rather restricted and often ungrammatical utterances; their inventory for linguistic variety is limited or simply not available. As I will argue in this paper, this limitation is due to ongoing language loss and the influence of English as the dominant way to communicate.

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Introduction
  4. The lure of a distant horizon: Variation in indigenous minority languages 1
  5. Part I. Variation in phonetics and phonology
  6. 1. The phonetic and phonological effects of obsolescence in Northern Paiute 23
  7. 2. Diglossia and monosyllabization in Eastern Cham: A sociolinguistic study 47
  8. 3. Affricates in Lleidatà: A sociophonetic case study 77
  9. 4. Sociolinguistic stratification and new dialect formation in a Canadian aboriginal community: Not so different after all? 109
  10. 5. The changing sound of the Māori language 129
  11. 6. Toward a study of language variation and change in Jonaz Chichimeco 153
  12. 7. A sociolinguistic sketch of vowel shifts in Kaqchikel: ATR-RTR parameters and redundancy markedness of syllabic nuclei in an Eastern Mayan language 173
  13. 8. Phonological features of attrition: The shift from Catalan to Spanish in Alicante 211
  14. 9. Sociophonetic variation in urban Ewe 229
  15. 10. Phonological variation in a Peruvian Quechua speech community 245
  16. 11. A tale of two diphthongs in an indigenous minority language: Yami of Taiwan 259
  17. 12. Phonological markedness, regional identity, and sex in Mayan: The fricativization of intervocalic /l/ 281
  18. 13. The pronunciation of /r/ in Frisian: A comparative study with Dutch and Town Frisian 299
  19. Part II. Variation in syntax, morphology, and morphophonology
  20. 14. Language shift among the Mansi 321
  21. 15. Fine-grained morphophonological variation in Scottish Gaelic: Evidence from the Linguistic Survey of Scotland 347
  22. 16. Animacy in Bislama? Using quantitative methods to evaluate transfer of a substrate feature 369
  23. 17. The challenges of less commonly studied languages: Writing a sociogrammar of Faetar 397
  24. 18. Language variation and change in a North Australian indigenous community 419
  25. 19. Ethnicity, bilingualism and variable clitic marking in Bishnupriya Manipuri 441
  26. 20. Clan as a sociolinguistic variable: Three approaches to Sui clans 463
  27. 21. Language loss in spatial semantics: Dene Sųłiné 485
  28. Index 517
Downloaded on 29.12.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1075/impact.25.24thi/html
Scroll to top button