Summary
"The aim of this project is to develop and test a new theory of variation and change in syntactic complexity, building on Trudgill’s (2011) theory of sociolinguistic typology and on the general architectural assumptions of Minimalist syntax. Trudgill (2011) makes the case that the distribution of simplicity and complexity across the world’s languages is related to the historical circumstances involved, with intense short-term contact involving extensive adult second language acquisition leading to simplification. This project will establish which syntactic features are ""responsive"" - that is, are susceptible to change under such circumstances. In the process, the project will bring together theories of second-language acquisition, syntax, computational modelling, and historical corpus linguistics to submit Trudgill's sociolinguistic-typological hypothesis to its most rigorous empirical test to date, in the domain of syntactic change. Crucial questions, such as the proportion of L2 acquirers and population structure necessary for simplification, will be teased out and addressed using computational modelling. We will look for responsive features in the domains of negation, Case, and subject expression, using the new generation of parsed historical corpora containing dated and localized texts at a high temporal and geographical resolution (e.g. the Corpus of Historical Low German currently in development), and put our theory and model to the test in these domains. The impact of the project will be to establish a new synthesis of historical sociolinguistics and syntactic theory that makes developments in each accountable to the other."
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Web resources: | https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/851423 |
Start date: | 01-10-2020 |
End date: | 30-09-2025 |
Total budget - Public funding: | 1 462 872,50 Euro - 1 462 872,00 Euro |
Cordis data
Original description
"The aim of this project is to develop and test a new theory of variation and change in syntactic complexity, building on Trudgill’s (2011) theory of sociolinguistic typology and on the general architectural assumptions of Minimalist syntax. Trudgill (2011) makes the case that the distribution of simplicity and complexity across the world’s languages is related to the historical circumstances involved, with intense short-term contact involving extensive adult second language acquisition leading to simplification. This project will establish which syntactic features are ""responsive"" - that is, are susceptible to change under such circumstances. In the process, the project will bring together theories of second-language acquisition, syntax, computational modelling, and historical corpus linguistics to submit Trudgill's sociolinguistic-typological hypothesis to its most rigorous empirical test to date, in the domain of syntactic change. Crucial questions, such as the proportion of L2 acquirers and population structure necessary for simplification, will be teased out and addressed using computational modelling. We will look for responsive features in the domains of negation, Case, and subject expression, using the new generation of parsed historical corpora containing dated and localized texts at a high temporal and geographical resolution (e.g. the Corpus of Historical Low German currently in development), and put our theory and model to the test in these domains. The impact of the project will be to establish a new synthesis of historical sociolinguistics and syntactic theory that makes developments in each accountable to the other."Status
SIGNEDCall topic
ERC-2019-STGUpdate Date
27-04-2024
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