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Spanish in Context: Online-First ArticlesCuando baja el sol
A variationist analysis of subject position in bilingual Arizonan and monolingual Mexican Spanish
Although the US Southwest region has a long history of language contact between English and Spanish, the
literature has provided mixed evidence for contact-induced language changes. The present study adds to this body of work with a
variationist analysis of subject position with intransitive constructions in bilingual Arizonan Spanish and monolingual Mexican
Spanish. Overall, our findings demonstrate that both varieties are influenced by the same linguistic factors with the same
directionality of effects; however, the overall rate of post-verbal subjects is lower with the linguistic factors in bilingual
Arizonan Spanish when compared to monolingual Mexican Spanish, which suggests frequential copying from English’s less flexible
word order. Additionally, there were differences between sociolinguistic generations, first generation bilingual and monolingual
speakers, and the constraint hierarchies of each variety. Altogether, these findings provide preliminary evidence for language
contact, and we outline future avenues to test for contact-induced change with this morphosyntactic variable.
Keywords: subject position, variationist sociolinguistics, comparative sociolinguistics, US Spanish, Spanish in the Southwest, language contact, morphosyntax
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Literature review
- 2.1Language contact and the US Southwest
- 2.2Factors that influence subject position in monolingual Spanish
- 2.3Spanish-English bilingualism and subject position
- 2.4Summary
- 3.Method
- 4.Results
- 5.Discussion and conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Author queries
-
References
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