Din fil förbereds och kommer strax att laddas ned.

Svenska landsmål och svenskt folkliv 2023

Tryckt bok

Köp för 195 kr

ePub

 

Läs online

 

Svenska landsmål och svenskt folkliv 2023

Tidskrift för talspråksforskning, folkloristik och kulturhistoria

Häftad
185 sidor
Utgiven
2024
Språk
swe

Pris från 195 kr

Tillbaka till volymen

Verdifullt om verbkongruens

Anmeldelse av Adam Horn af Åminnes doktoravhandling: Från person till person. Avvecklingen av nordisk personkongruens ur ett diakront perspektiv

Hans-Olav Enger

Källsystem: Publicera | Publicerad: 2024-08-23 | Sidor: 7-21

Sammanfattning

AbstractIn his excellent thesis from 2022, Adam Horn af Åminne discusses the reduction and loss of agreement for person and number in North Germanic in general, and in South-West Swedish dialects in particular. In this paper, I adhere to the tradition of doctoral thesis defences in Scandinavia, which is both to summarise the work and to question some of the conclusions. The thesis presents a valuable survey of the process of gradual reduction and ultimate loss. It incorporates insights from typological linguistics and it tracks the final stages in South-West Swedish dialects of the 19th and 20th centuries in detail. The fact that this kind of agreement remained for so long has received too little attention up until now, so the thesis is a welcome contribution. The reduction process is also studied in particular individuals; the author uses the old dialectological data in a new way. He shows differences between dialect areas, and that the newer patterns tend to turn up first in areas that are more ‘central’. Where we have traditionally seen a dialect levelling in Sweden, the author sees a language shift. Arguments are presented for seeing the process as simplification. On this point, however, I am somewhat sceptical. While the final outcome may look like simplification, many intermediate stages do not, making it difficult to believe that simplification is the motivation for the process.

Nyckelord

North Germanic; Swedish; person; number; verbal agreement; morphology; dialectology; diachrony; hybrid paradigms; simplification

DOI | Licens | Originalpublicering