TY - JOUR
T1 - Variation in the reflexive in Australian Kriol
AU - Dickson, Greg
AU - Durantin, Gautier
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© John Benjamins Publishing Company.
PY - 2019/12/31
Y1 - 2019/12/31
N2 - With 20,000 speakers across Northern Australia, Australian Kriol is well known to exhibit geographic variation but this has never been systematically studied. This article stems from the first dialectological study of Kriol, focusing on the eastern portion of the Kriol-speaking area. It analyses variation in forms of the Kriol reflexive, which is derived from the English form ‘myself/meself’ but is invariant for person and number. The analysis utilises random forests modelling to analyse the importance of factors, a new method available to variation studies that is particularly useful when applied to small languages with small datasets. With geography confirmed as the major factor accounting for variation, areal patterns showing variation in lexical form of the reflexive, the medial consonant, the final vowel and the final consonant are considered. This study also documents new variants of the Kriol reflexive and incorporates perceptual dialectology, combining to better inform classifications of Kriol dialects.
AB - With 20,000 speakers across Northern Australia, Australian Kriol is well known to exhibit geographic variation but this has never been systematically studied. This article stems from the first dialectological study of Kriol, focusing on the eastern portion of the Kriol-speaking area. It analyses variation in forms of the Kriol reflexive, which is derived from the English form ‘myself/meself’ but is invariant for person and number. The analysis utilises random forests modelling to analyse the importance of factors, a new method available to variation studies that is particularly useful when applied to small languages with small datasets. With geography confirmed as the major factor accounting for variation, areal patterns showing variation in lexical form of the reflexive, the medial consonant, the final vowel and the final consonant are considered. This study also documents new variants of the Kriol reflexive and incorporates perceptual dialectology, combining to better inform classifications of Kriol dialects.
KW - Boruta
KW - Kriol
KW - classification trees
KW - dialectology
KW - geographic variation
KW - perceptual dialectology
KW - pidgin and creole languages
KW - random forests
KW - reflexives
KW - variation in contact languages
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85108723238&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1075/aplv.00005.dic
DO - 10.1075/aplv.00005.dic
M3 - Article
SN - 2215-1354
VL - 5
SP - 171
EP - 207
JO - Asia-Pacific Language Variation
JF - Asia-Pacific Language Variation
IS - 2
ER -