16.1249, Qs: Polite Pronouns; Longitudinal Acquisition Studies

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Tue Apr 19 23:09:53 UTC 2005


LINGUIST List: Vol-16-1249. Tue Apr 19 2005. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 16.1249, Qs: Polite Pronouns; Longitudinal Acquisition Studies

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===========================Directory==============================

1)
Date: 19-Apr-2005
From: Johannes Helmbrecht < johannes.helmbrecht at uni-erfurt.de >
Subject: Emergence and Spread of Polite Pronouns

2)
Date: 19-Apr-2005
From: Sonja Janssens < Sonja.Janssens at vub.ac.be >
Subject: Longitudinal L2 Acquisition Studies

	
-------------------------Message 1 ----------------------------------
Date: Tue, 19 Apr 2005 19:07:39
From: Johannes Helmbrecht < johannes.helmbrecht at uni-erfurt.de >
Subject: Emergence and Spread of Polite Pronouns


Dear Linguists,

It is well known that Europe is a linguistic area and this is in particular
obvious with regard to politeness distinctions in personal pronouns. Brown
& Gilman in their seminal article ''The pronouns of power and solidarity''
claim that the politeness distinction between tu/ vous (abbreviated as
T/V)arose in the late phase of the Roman empire with respect to the address
of the emperor. At that time, there were two of them, one in Rome and the
other in Constantinople. Later, the V form adopted a singular meaning
establishing the well-known contrast tu/vous in the Middle Ages in France.
This contrast was then regarded as the model for the spread of the T/V
distiction in the languages of Europe.

The theory of the origin of the T/V contrast was criticized as speculative
several times in the literature (e.g. Muehlhaeusler/ Harre 1990), but as
far as I know, it has been never disputed that this contrast in Old French
pronouns was borrowed into the adjacent languages and then spread even to
the peripheral languages of Europe. My question now is the following: does
anybody know or has references of how this spread came about. I am
interested in the historical details: when did the T/V contrast occur first
in the other languages of Europe (when is it attested first e.g. in Danish,
Polish, Russian etc.) and what can be said about the process of the
borrowing (which parts of the society of the borrowing language community
used it first and under what circumstances). The second question is: once
the contrast was adopted in one language how was it used (was it an
optional means, or obligatory and who had to use which form?)

Thank you very much in advance for your contributions. I will post a
summary of the responses on the same List.

Johannes Helmbrecht
University of Erfurt, Germany

Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics
                     Historical Linguistics
                     Pragmatics

Language Family(ies): Indo-European



	
-------------------------Message 2 ----------------------------------
Date: Tue, 19 Apr 2005 19:07:43
From: Sonja Janssens < Sonja.Janssens at vub.ac.be >
Subject: Longitudinal L2 Acquisition Studies

	

I am currently doing a longitudinal study on the acquisition of Dutch and
French as second languages in Brussels. I would like to put together or
find an overview of all the major group longitudinal studies on this
subject in particular,  but I am also interested in longitudinal studies
that focus on other languages.  Can anyone direct me to an existing
overview or send me a number of references? Please respond to
Sonja.Janssens at vub.ac.be. Thank you very much for your help.

Kind regards
Sonja Janssens
Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Department of English

Linguistic Field(s): Applied Linguistics
                     Language Acquisition

Subject Language(s): Dutch (DUT)
                     French (FRN)






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