Pronominal usage in Cite Duits, a Dutch-German-Limburgish contact variety

Nantke Pecht

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterAcademic

Abstract

This article aims to contribute to the debate on mixed languages by discussing the use of subject pronouns in Cité Duits, a contact variety composed of features of three structurally related varieties, i.e. Belgian Dutch, German and the Limburgian dialect Maaslands. This in-group variety, now on the cusp of disappearing, developed among the locally-born children of immigrant coalminers in a segregated mining district in Belgian-Limburg in the 1930s. By examining frequency distribution, phonological-lexical variation and the position of the pronoun to the finite verb and complementizer, I demonstrate that pronominal forms exhibit a remarkable degree of homogeneity. I argue that, in contrast to contexts of code-switching where speakers make use of more than one pronominal system, Cité Duits exhibits a rather regular pattern of language mixing in pronouns, yielding a stable paradigm with conventionalized forms on a mixed language basis. Accordingly, the use of these forms is no longer optional, which points towards a stabilized variety. The analysis is based on data from audio recordings (340 minutes) of spontaneous-like interactions collected by a method of sociolinguistic interview in 2012/13 and 2015/16.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationNew Perspectives on Mixed Languages. From Core to Fringe
EditorsMaria Mazzoli, Eeva Sippola
PublisherDe Gruyter Mouton
Pages299-324
ISBN (Electronic)9781501511257
ISBN (Print)9781501517266, 9781501520945
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 8 Jun 2021

Publication series

SeriesLanguage Contact and Bilingualism 18

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