Events

Upcoming events

Event Information:

  • Tue
    09
    Dec
    2025

    Gina Saviano (Ghent University) – "Mapping the Regional Linguistic Space between Italian and Dialect: A Computational Analysis of Phonetic Features in Neapolitan"

    11:00 amBlandijn, Faculteitszaal

    Abstract

    “Continuum con addensamenti”, ‘continuum with agglomerations’: this is how Berruto once described the Italian linguistic repertoire. Much has been discussed about the extremes of this continuum; however, little do we know about those intermediate “agglomerations”. How many are there? How are they organized? Do they share features? To address these questions, we adopt a phonetic perspective and borrow a technique typically used in commercial profiling. Examining established Neapolitan phonetic features alongside new prosodic parameters, we identify possible speaker profiles and features agglomerations, shedding a new light on the intermediate varieties of the Italian standard-dialect continuum. In this talk, I will discuss preliminary studies and findings, applying this innovative methodology to offer new insights into the nature of the concept of variety.

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Past events

Event Information:

  • Thu
    18
    May
    2017

    If not ≠ unless - Exceptive clauses in Continental West Germanic

    3:00 pmBlandijn, Grote Vergaderzaal 3de verdieping

    Elisabeth Witzenhausen: If not ≠ unless - Exceptive clauses in Continental West Germanic

    In this talk, I address the difference between negative conditionals (1a) and exceptive clauses (1b).

    (1) I will come and help you ...

    a) if I don‘t fall into a river

    b) unless I fall into a river

    It has long been claimed that exceptives and negative conditionals share the same underlying semantic structure, with differences only in the surface structure; however, Geis (1973) and those following him have presented challenges for this view, suggesting rather that the two constructions have different semantics. I present data from Middle Dutch (MD), Middle High German (MHG) and Middle Low German (MLG) that support an analysis of two different semantic structures. In doing so, I discuss some observations regarding conditionals more generally in the modern Germanic languages that are relevant to understanding the historical data from my corpus study. In particular, in MD, MHG and MD, exceptive adverbial clauses appear as subjunctive V2-clauses without any complementizer (2). In the early stages, the preverbal clitic ne is used which expressed sentential negation in Old Saxon (OS) and Old High German (OHG).

    (2) dhe scal ome sin wulle loen gheuen he ne hebbe it uerboret mit bosheit

    DEM shall him his demanded wage give he NE have.SUBJ it forfeited with mischief

    ‘who shall give him his demanded wage, unless he has forfeited it with mischief.’

    (Westphalian: 1492)

    I will provide arguments for analysing MD, MLG and MHG exceptives as peripheral adverbial clauses, while their related OHG and OS structures are central adverbial clauses.

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