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The variable agreement
of presentational haber
in Dominican Spanish
           Jeroen Claes
     (Universiteit Antwerpen)
      jeroenclaes@gmail.com
1


                          Outline
•   Introduction
•   Research questions
•   Theoretic framework
•   Hypotheses
•   Methods
•   Results
•   Conclusions
2


                                  1. Introduction
• Impersonal, subjectless verb in normative Spanish.
   - Había niños en el parque?
     ‘Was-there children in the park?’
• NP argument is a direct object:
   - Sí, losOBJ había.
     ‘Yes, thereOBJ, PLUR was.’
• Default 3rd person singular verb-agreement.
• In many varieties, optional number-agreement is
  observed.
   - Había/habían niños en el parque.
     ‘There were children in the park.’
3


                               1. Introduction
• Variation has been around for at least 200
  years (Fontanella de Weinberg, 1992).
• Change in progress, favored by:
  (e.g. Díaz-Campos 2003)
  -   Human-reference NPs.
  -   Certain verb-tenses.
  -   Lower socioeconomic status.
  -   Male gender.
4


                  2. Research questions
• What is the linguistic distribution of the
  pluralization of presentational haber in the
  Spanish of Santo Domingo, the Dominican
  Republic?
• What is the social distribution of the
  pluralization of presentational haber in Santo
  Domingo, the Dominican Republic?
• How can these distributions be explained in a
  psychologically and sociolinguistically
  adequate manner?
5

                 3. Cognitive Construction
                                Grammar
• Usage-based.

• Every meaningful aspect of language can be
  modeled with constructions (form-meaning pairs).

• Broad generalizations (e.g. transitivity) and
  idiosyncratic patterns (e.g. words, idioms) are
  captured with the same ease.
6

             3. Cognitive Construction
                            Grammar
• Constructions determine argument-structure:
   - Which and how many argument roles.
   - How these are mapped onto syntactic
     functions.
   - How information is distributed over the
     arguments.
• Verbs can combine with multiple argument-
  structure constructions.
7


                      4.1 Main hypothesis
• In Santo Domingo, the Dominican Republic,
  the pluralization of presentational haber
  corresponds to a slowly advancing ongoing
  language change from below that consists in
  the replacement of PRES-1 by PRES-2, which
  only differ in regards to the syntactic function
  of the NP (PRES-1: object; PRES-2: subject)
  and the social and stylistic connotations that
  are expressed by their relative frequencies.
8


               4.2 Corollary hypotheses
• Preference for unmarked coding (Langacker, 1991:
  298):
      H1: Speakers will tend to code subject-like NPs
      as subjects, using PRES-2.
9


                4.2 Corollary hypotheses
• Usage-based memory model (e.g. Langacker, 1987:
  59-60):
  - Forms that occur mainly in one pattern are stored as
    partially filled instances of that schema.
  - This discourages speakers to use competing constructions
    to express similar conceptualizations.
     H2: The tenses for which the form of haber had
     a high token frequency in the PRES-1 pattern,
     but occurred only sporadically in other
     constructions before PRES-2 began its
     advancement will disfavor PRES-2 .
10


              4.2 Corollary hypotheses
• Language users tend to recycle structures
  (Goldberg, 2006: 120-125; Labov, 1994:
  Chap. 20):
      H3: There will be priming effects at the
      argument-structure level.
• Linguistic change from below:
      H4: The variation will conform to the
      Principles of Linguistic Change Labov
      (2001) formulates for changes from
      below.
11


                                            5. Methods
• Recordings of 24 native speakers, residents of the Greater
  Santo Domingo Area.
   - Rougly 28 hours of speech/250,000 words.
   - Fieldwork took place in April-May, 2011.
• Stratified by:
   - Age (25-35 years; 55+ years).
   - Academic achievement (University vs. No university).
   - Gender (Male, Female).
• Post-stratified by:
   - Social class (Academic achievement, Housing, Profession).
12


                                                       5. Methods
• Three sections/speech styles:
   - +/- 30-minute sociolinguistic interview
      • Included questions with the variable to test for comprehension priming.
   - Reading task
      • 35 decision contexts.
      • 20 trials, 15 fillers.
   - Questionnaire task.
      • 45 decision contexts.
      • 32 trials, 13 fillers.
13


                                                 5. Methods
• Mixed-effect logistic regression with Johnson’s
  (2009) Rbrul:
  - VARBRUL-style factor weight output:
     • 0-0.5: factor disfavors variant
     • 0.5-1: factor favors variant
  - Fixed effects:
     • Animacy, Definiteness/specificity, Distribution of the verb-forms
       in the sixteenth century, Production priming, comprehension
       priming, academic achievement, age, gender, social class,
       interview section.
  - Random intercepts:
     • Speakers
     • Lemmas of NPs’ heads
14


                  6. Results



                   Plural haber
 53.3%   46.7%
         N= 859    Singular haber
N=1002
15

    6.1 Resemblance to prototypical
                           subject
• Which objective factors can model object/subjecthood?
  - Best-known set (agent  patient & topic  focus)
    cannot be used.
  - Animacy:
      • Animates vs. inanimates (Du Bois, 1987)
   - Definiteness/specificity:
      • Definite > Specific indefinite > indefinite (Langacker,
        1991)
16


                                  6.1 Animacy

                            .40
Inanimate
                            .40


                                       .60
Animates
                                       .60


            0   0.2       0.4        0.6     0.8
                 Nouns   Speakers
17

6.2 Degree of entrenchment of the
              verb-form in PRES-1
• Analysis of 10,000 tokens of 3rd-person haber in a
  sixteenth-century Latin-American corpus (CORDE):
   - Hay: practically exclusive to the PRES-1 pattern.
      • Strongest cognitive representation: PRES-1 + hay.
   - Hubo: occurs primarily in PRES-1.
      • Strongest cognitive representation: PRES-1 + hubo.
   - Había, haya, habrá and hubiera: used in 3 constructions.
      • Strongest cognitive representation: independent node.
   - Habría & composed tenses: very infrequent.
      • Strongest cognitive representation: independent node.
18

6.2 Degree of entrenchment of the
              verb-form in PRES-1
 Hayn and hubieron: mainly in            .13
  presentational expressions               .17

Habrían, composed tenses and                                  .71
verbal periphrases: infrequent                               .68

Habían, hubieran, hayan, habrá                                .73
    n: mainly outside of…                                    .70

                                 0       0.2     0.4   0.6     0.8
                       Nouns         Speakers
19


                                   6.3 Priming
• Distance to the prime (in clauses)
  - 0-20 clauses
  - 21+ clauses
• Formal similarity to the prime
  - Same/different construction.
  - Same/different Tense, Mood, Aspect morphology
    (TMA).
20


    6.3 Priming: Production priming
PRES-1, different verb-form              .38
                                        .37

PRES-1, identical verb-form                    .46
                                              .45
No earlier use/last use 21+                    .47
     clauses removed                           .47

PRES-2, different verb-form                          .54
                                                       .58

PRES-2, identical verb-form                                 .64
                                                           .63

                              0   0.2   0.4          0.6          0.8
   Nouns    Speakers
21

 6.3 Production priming in language
                             change
80.00%
                              69.90% 71.40%
70.00%                                                    64.40%
60.00%                            57.40%         55.60%
50.00%
                                                     41.40%
40.00%
30.00%
20.00%
10.00%     4.80% 6.70%
               3.80%
   Unprimed
 0.00%
   PRES-1
  Habían, hubieran, hayan, habrán, habrían, the composed tenses and oth
                Hayn                                 Hubieron
   PRES-2
22

           6.3 Priming: Comprehension
                              priming
No earlier use/last use 21+                    .42
     clauses removed                            .43

                   PRES-1                           .45
                                                   .44

                   PRES-2                                    .63
                                                            .62

                              0    0.2       0.4          0.6      0.8
                        Nouns     Speakers
23


                             6.4 Social class

Upper class                        .42
                                    .44

Lower class                           .47
                                     .46

Middle class                                  .60
                                               61

               0   0.2       0.4            0.6     0.8
                   Nouns   Speakers
24


                                    6.5 Gender


   Male              43.60%




Female                                     49.90%



     40.00% 42.00% 44.00% 46.00% 48.00% 50.00% 52.00%

Note: p=0.007
25


                      6.5 Gender (and age)
60.00%                52.40%
                                 48.80% 47.60%
50.00%
40.00%       38.10%

30.00%
20.00%
10.00%
0.00%
             First generation   Second generation

  Male   Female
26


            7. Discussion & conclusions
• Hypothesis 1 = confirmed
  - The most salient feature of protoypical subjects favors
    PRES-2.
• Hypothesis 2 = confirmed
  - Those tense-forms that occurred mainly in presentational
    clauses disfavor PRES-2.
• Hypothesis 3 = confirmed
  - Long-lasting priming effects at argument-structure level.
• Phenomenon = argument-structure variation
27


              7. Discussion & conclusions
• Three general principles of language use constrain the
  alternations:
   • H1: The preference for unmarked coding encourages the use of
     PRES-2 with NPs that approach the subject prototype.

   • H2: Statistical preemption discourages the use of PRES-2 for
     conceptualizations that match entrenched instances of PRES-1.

   • H3: Priming extends the use of PRES-2 to conceptualizations that
     match entrenched instances of PRES-1.
28


              7. Discussion & conclusions
• Hypothesis 4 = partially confirmed
   - Social class pattern conforms to Labov’s (2001)
     Principles of Linguistic Change.
      • The variation expresses social class identity for the entire speech
        community.
   - Gender is not statistically significant for all speakers.
      • Only for younger Dominicans the variation expresses
        gender identity
          - Social meaning changes over time (Eckert 2008).
   - Relatively early stage of an ongoing change from
     below (Labov, 2001: 307-309).
   - Slowly progressing change.
29


                                                   References
DU BOIS, J. (1987). The discourse basis of ergativity. Language. LXIII
        (4), 805-855.
ECKERT, P. (2008). Variation and the indexical field. Journal of
        sociolinguistics, XII (4), 453-476.
Fontanella de Weinberg, M.B. (1992). Variación sincrónica y
        diacrónica de las construcciones con haber en el español
        americano. Boletín de filología,XXXIII, 35-46.
GOLDBERG, A. (2006). Constructions at work. Oxford: Oxford
        University Press.
GOLDBERG, A. (1995). Constructions. Chicago: Chicago University
        Press.
JOHNSON, D. E. (2009). Getting off the GoldVarb standard:
        Introducing       Rbrul for mixed-effects variable rule analysis .
Language and Linguistics Compass , III (1), 359-383.
30


                                               References
LABOV, W. (2001). Principles of Linguistic Change. Vol. 2. Oxford:
        Blackwell.
LABOV, W. (1994). Principles of Linguistic Change. Vol. 1. Oxford:
        Blackwell.
LABOV, W. (1972). Sociolinguistic Patterns. Philadelphia: UPenn
        Press.
LAKOFF, G. (1987). Women, fire, and dangerous things. Chicago:
        Chicago University Press.
LANGACKER, R. (1991). Foundations of Cognitive Grammar. Vol.2.
        Stanford: Stanford University Press.
LANGACKER, R. (1987). Foundations of Cognitive Grammar. Vol.1.
        Stanford: Stanford University Press.
31


               Description of the variants
• Syntax:
  • PRES-1: <[Locative] haber [Object]>

  • PRES-2: <[Locative] haber [Subject]>

  • The constructions do not specify the linear ordering of the
    arguments.

  • Boldface square brackets indicate profiled, omissible
    arguments.

  • The locative is an argument, not an adjunct (Lakoff 1987).
32


              Description of the variants

• Semantics:
  • POINTING-OUT Idealized Cognitive Model (Lakoff
   1987).

  • Argument roles:
     • NP argument: zero.

     • Locative: location.
33


             Description of the variants

• Pragmatics:
  • Hearer-New NP argument (Lakoff 1987).

• Social connotations:
  • This kind of meaning can be modeled quite
    straightforwardly in Cognitive Construction
    Grammar.
34


             Social connotations in CCG
• Only the frequencies of otherwise ‘meaningless’
  alternations can signal social meaning directly.
• Constructions that capture ‘meaningless’ alternations
  connect abstractions of observed frequencies
  (probabilities) to social meanings.
• Central social meaning: subgroup membership (Silverstein
  2003).
• Metonymy can account for the variety of interpretations
  that Eckert (2008) points out.
• Extensions can be extended multiple times more, which
  leads to the fluid ‘indexical field’ proposed by Eckert
  (2008).
35


           Social connotations in CCG
• With time and repetition, some of these
  extended meanings can become
  conventionalized (e.g. stylistic appropriateness
  can be considered a conventionalized
  extension of social class; Silverstein 2003).
• The context of the usage event will activate or
  background potential meanings (Langacker
  1987).
36


            Where did this come from?
• Occasional confusion (online constructional
  blends caused by analogy [Desagulier, 2005))
  has always existed in Spanish.
  - E avién allí muchos engeños e muchas armas
    ‘And there, there were a lot of deceits and a lot of
    weapons.’ (13th century; Moreno-Bernal (1978:
    290-291)
• Not a change: occasional glitches caused by
  analogy.
37


            Where did this come from?
• Actuation:
  - Latin America/Canary Islands:
     • Language/dialect contact through colonization. Large
       Population of L2/D2 speakers; formation of a new variety.
     • Greater opportunities for social mobility.
  - Catalan Language Area:
     • Language/dialect contact during industrialization process
       of the 19th century.
     • Pluralization in Catalan  Pluralization in Spanish.
     • Rapid expansion during 19th century.
38

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The pluralization of presentational 'haber' in Dominican Spanish

  • 1. The variable agreement of presentational haber in Dominican Spanish Jeroen Claes (Universiteit Antwerpen) jeroenclaes@gmail.com
  • 2. 1 Outline • Introduction • Research questions • Theoretic framework • Hypotheses • Methods • Results • Conclusions
  • 3. 2 1. Introduction • Impersonal, subjectless verb in normative Spanish. - Había niños en el parque? ‘Was-there children in the park?’ • NP argument is a direct object: - Sí, losOBJ había. ‘Yes, thereOBJ, PLUR was.’ • Default 3rd person singular verb-agreement. • In many varieties, optional number-agreement is observed. - Había/habían niños en el parque. ‘There were children in the park.’
  • 4. 3 1. Introduction • Variation has been around for at least 200 years (Fontanella de Weinberg, 1992). • Change in progress, favored by: (e.g. Díaz-Campos 2003) - Human-reference NPs. - Certain verb-tenses. - Lower socioeconomic status. - Male gender.
  • 5. 4 2. Research questions • What is the linguistic distribution of the pluralization of presentational haber in the Spanish of Santo Domingo, the Dominican Republic? • What is the social distribution of the pluralization of presentational haber in Santo Domingo, the Dominican Republic? • How can these distributions be explained in a psychologically and sociolinguistically adequate manner?
  • 6. 5 3. Cognitive Construction Grammar • Usage-based. • Every meaningful aspect of language can be modeled with constructions (form-meaning pairs). • Broad generalizations (e.g. transitivity) and idiosyncratic patterns (e.g. words, idioms) are captured with the same ease.
  • 7. 6 3. Cognitive Construction Grammar • Constructions determine argument-structure: - Which and how many argument roles. - How these are mapped onto syntactic functions. - How information is distributed over the arguments. • Verbs can combine with multiple argument- structure constructions.
  • 8. 7 4.1 Main hypothesis • In Santo Domingo, the Dominican Republic, the pluralization of presentational haber corresponds to a slowly advancing ongoing language change from below that consists in the replacement of PRES-1 by PRES-2, which only differ in regards to the syntactic function of the NP (PRES-1: object; PRES-2: subject) and the social and stylistic connotations that are expressed by their relative frequencies.
  • 9. 8 4.2 Corollary hypotheses • Preference for unmarked coding (Langacker, 1991: 298): H1: Speakers will tend to code subject-like NPs as subjects, using PRES-2.
  • 10. 9 4.2 Corollary hypotheses • Usage-based memory model (e.g. Langacker, 1987: 59-60): - Forms that occur mainly in one pattern are stored as partially filled instances of that schema. - This discourages speakers to use competing constructions to express similar conceptualizations. H2: The tenses for which the form of haber had a high token frequency in the PRES-1 pattern, but occurred only sporadically in other constructions before PRES-2 began its advancement will disfavor PRES-2 .
  • 11. 10 4.2 Corollary hypotheses • Language users tend to recycle structures (Goldberg, 2006: 120-125; Labov, 1994: Chap. 20): H3: There will be priming effects at the argument-structure level. • Linguistic change from below: H4: The variation will conform to the Principles of Linguistic Change Labov (2001) formulates for changes from below.
  • 12. 11 5. Methods • Recordings of 24 native speakers, residents of the Greater Santo Domingo Area. - Rougly 28 hours of speech/250,000 words. - Fieldwork took place in April-May, 2011. • Stratified by: - Age (25-35 years; 55+ years). - Academic achievement (University vs. No university). - Gender (Male, Female). • Post-stratified by: - Social class (Academic achievement, Housing, Profession).
  • 13. 12 5. Methods • Three sections/speech styles: - +/- 30-minute sociolinguistic interview • Included questions with the variable to test for comprehension priming. - Reading task • 35 decision contexts. • 20 trials, 15 fillers. - Questionnaire task. • 45 decision contexts. • 32 trials, 13 fillers.
  • 14. 13 5. Methods • Mixed-effect logistic regression with Johnson’s (2009) Rbrul: - VARBRUL-style factor weight output: • 0-0.5: factor disfavors variant • 0.5-1: factor favors variant - Fixed effects: • Animacy, Definiteness/specificity, Distribution of the verb-forms in the sixteenth century, Production priming, comprehension priming, academic achievement, age, gender, social class, interview section. - Random intercepts: • Speakers • Lemmas of NPs’ heads
  • 15. 14 6. Results Plural haber 53.3% 46.7% N= 859 Singular haber N=1002
  • 16. 15 6.1 Resemblance to prototypical subject • Which objective factors can model object/subjecthood? - Best-known set (agent  patient & topic  focus) cannot be used. - Animacy: • Animates vs. inanimates (Du Bois, 1987) - Definiteness/specificity: • Definite > Specific indefinite > indefinite (Langacker, 1991)
  • 17. 16 6.1 Animacy .40 Inanimate .40 .60 Animates .60 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 Nouns Speakers
  • 18. 17 6.2 Degree of entrenchment of the verb-form in PRES-1 • Analysis of 10,000 tokens of 3rd-person haber in a sixteenth-century Latin-American corpus (CORDE): - Hay: practically exclusive to the PRES-1 pattern. • Strongest cognitive representation: PRES-1 + hay. - Hubo: occurs primarily in PRES-1. • Strongest cognitive representation: PRES-1 + hubo. - Había, haya, habrá and hubiera: used in 3 constructions. • Strongest cognitive representation: independent node. - Habría & composed tenses: very infrequent. • Strongest cognitive representation: independent node.
  • 19. 18 6.2 Degree of entrenchment of the verb-form in PRES-1 Hayn and hubieron: mainly in .13 presentational expressions .17 Habrían, composed tenses and .71 verbal periphrases: infrequent .68 Habían, hubieran, hayan, habrá .73 n: mainly outside of… .70 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 Nouns Speakers
  • 20. 19 6.3 Priming • Distance to the prime (in clauses) - 0-20 clauses - 21+ clauses • Formal similarity to the prime - Same/different construction. - Same/different Tense, Mood, Aspect morphology (TMA).
  • 21. 20 6.3 Priming: Production priming PRES-1, different verb-form .38 .37 PRES-1, identical verb-form .46 .45 No earlier use/last use 21+ .47 clauses removed .47 PRES-2, different verb-form .54 .58 PRES-2, identical verb-form .64 .63 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 Nouns Speakers
  • 22. 21 6.3 Production priming in language change 80.00% 69.90% 71.40% 70.00% 64.40% 60.00% 57.40% 55.60% 50.00% 41.40% 40.00% 30.00% 20.00% 10.00% 4.80% 6.70% 3.80% Unprimed 0.00% PRES-1 Habían, hubieran, hayan, habrán, habrían, the composed tenses and oth Hayn Hubieron PRES-2
  • 23. 22 6.3 Priming: Comprehension priming No earlier use/last use 21+ .42 clauses removed .43 PRES-1 .45 .44 PRES-2 .63 .62 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 Nouns Speakers
  • 24. 23 6.4 Social class Upper class .42 .44 Lower class .47 .46 Middle class .60 61 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 Nouns Speakers
  • 25. 24 6.5 Gender Male 43.60% Female 49.90% 40.00% 42.00% 44.00% 46.00% 48.00% 50.00% 52.00% Note: p=0.007
  • 26. 25 6.5 Gender (and age) 60.00% 52.40% 48.80% 47.60% 50.00% 40.00% 38.10% 30.00% 20.00% 10.00% 0.00% First generation Second generation Male Female
  • 27. 26 7. Discussion & conclusions • Hypothesis 1 = confirmed - The most salient feature of protoypical subjects favors PRES-2. • Hypothesis 2 = confirmed - Those tense-forms that occurred mainly in presentational clauses disfavor PRES-2. • Hypothesis 3 = confirmed - Long-lasting priming effects at argument-structure level. • Phenomenon = argument-structure variation
  • 28. 27 7. Discussion & conclusions • Three general principles of language use constrain the alternations: • H1: The preference for unmarked coding encourages the use of PRES-2 with NPs that approach the subject prototype. • H2: Statistical preemption discourages the use of PRES-2 for conceptualizations that match entrenched instances of PRES-1. • H3: Priming extends the use of PRES-2 to conceptualizations that match entrenched instances of PRES-1.
  • 29. 28 7. Discussion & conclusions • Hypothesis 4 = partially confirmed - Social class pattern conforms to Labov’s (2001) Principles of Linguistic Change. • The variation expresses social class identity for the entire speech community. - Gender is not statistically significant for all speakers. • Only for younger Dominicans the variation expresses gender identity - Social meaning changes over time (Eckert 2008). - Relatively early stage of an ongoing change from below (Labov, 2001: 307-309). - Slowly progressing change.
  • 30. 29 References DU BOIS, J. (1987). The discourse basis of ergativity. Language. LXIII (4), 805-855. ECKERT, P. (2008). Variation and the indexical field. Journal of sociolinguistics, XII (4), 453-476. Fontanella de Weinberg, M.B. (1992). Variación sincrónica y diacrónica de las construcciones con haber en el español americano. Boletín de filología,XXXIII, 35-46. GOLDBERG, A. (2006). Constructions at work. Oxford: Oxford University Press. GOLDBERG, A. (1995). Constructions. Chicago: Chicago University Press. JOHNSON, D. E. (2009). Getting off the GoldVarb standard: Introducing Rbrul for mixed-effects variable rule analysis . Language and Linguistics Compass , III (1), 359-383.
  • 31. 30 References LABOV, W. (2001). Principles of Linguistic Change. Vol. 2. Oxford: Blackwell. LABOV, W. (1994). Principles of Linguistic Change. Vol. 1. Oxford: Blackwell. LABOV, W. (1972). Sociolinguistic Patterns. Philadelphia: UPenn Press. LAKOFF, G. (1987). Women, fire, and dangerous things. Chicago: Chicago University Press. LANGACKER, R. (1991). Foundations of Cognitive Grammar. Vol.2. Stanford: Stanford University Press. LANGACKER, R. (1987). Foundations of Cognitive Grammar. Vol.1. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  • 32. 31 Description of the variants • Syntax: • PRES-1: <[Locative] haber [Object]> • PRES-2: <[Locative] haber [Subject]> • The constructions do not specify the linear ordering of the arguments. • Boldface square brackets indicate profiled, omissible arguments. • The locative is an argument, not an adjunct (Lakoff 1987).
  • 33. 32 Description of the variants • Semantics: • POINTING-OUT Idealized Cognitive Model (Lakoff 1987). • Argument roles: • NP argument: zero. • Locative: location.
  • 34. 33 Description of the variants • Pragmatics: • Hearer-New NP argument (Lakoff 1987). • Social connotations: • This kind of meaning can be modeled quite straightforwardly in Cognitive Construction Grammar.
  • 35. 34 Social connotations in CCG • Only the frequencies of otherwise ‘meaningless’ alternations can signal social meaning directly. • Constructions that capture ‘meaningless’ alternations connect abstractions of observed frequencies (probabilities) to social meanings. • Central social meaning: subgroup membership (Silverstein 2003). • Metonymy can account for the variety of interpretations that Eckert (2008) points out. • Extensions can be extended multiple times more, which leads to the fluid ‘indexical field’ proposed by Eckert (2008).
  • 36. 35 Social connotations in CCG • With time and repetition, some of these extended meanings can become conventionalized (e.g. stylistic appropriateness can be considered a conventionalized extension of social class; Silverstein 2003). • The context of the usage event will activate or background potential meanings (Langacker 1987).
  • 37. 36 Where did this come from? • Occasional confusion (online constructional blends caused by analogy [Desagulier, 2005)) has always existed in Spanish. - E avién allí muchos engeños e muchas armas ‘And there, there were a lot of deceits and a lot of weapons.’ (13th century; Moreno-Bernal (1978: 290-291) • Not a change: occasional glitches caused by analogy.
  • 38. 37 Where did this come from? • Actuation: - Latin America/Canary Islands: • Language/dialect contact through colonization. Large Population of L2/D2 speakers; formation of a new variety. • Greater opportunities for social mobility. - Catalan Language Area: • Language/dialect contact during industrialization process of the 19th century. • Pluralization in Catalan  Pluralization in Spanish. • Rapid expansion during 19th century.
  • 39. 38