Skip to main content
mobile

L'Harmattan Open Access platform

  • Search
  • OA Collections
  • L'Harmattan Archive
Englishen
  • Françaisfr
  • Deutschde
  • Magyarhu
LoginRegister
  • Volume Overview
  • Page
  • Text
  • Metadata
  • Clipping
Preview
022_000062/0000

Code-Switching and Optimality. An Optimality-Theoretical Approach to the Socio-Pragmatic Patterns of Hungarian-English Code-Switching

  • Preview
  • PDF
  • Show Metadata
  • Show Permalink
Author
Tímea Kovács
Field of science
Nyelvhasználat: pragmatika, szociolingvisztika, beszédelemzés... / Use of language: pragmatics, sociolinguistics, discourse analysis... (13027)
Series
Collection Károli. Collection of Papers
Type of publication
monográfia
022_000062/0182
  • Volume Overview
  • Page
  • Text
  • Metadata
  • Clipping
Page 183 [183]
  • Preview
  • Show Permalink
  • JPG
  • TIFF
  • Prev
  • Next
022_000062/0182

OCR

CHAPTER 8 —o> — OVERALL SUMMARY In this study, I set out (Chapters 1, 2) to test the applicability of Bolonyai and Bhatt’s Optimality Theory for the analysis of bilingual grammar on the Hungarian-American immigrant community living in North Carolina and to analyze the sociolinguistic characteristics of the examined community describing the socio-cognitive dimension, which instantiates the community’s bilingual grammar. First, I have examined the meaning-making function of code-switching from various theoretical perspectives (Chapter 3). Then, the theoretical framework of the Optimality Theory for the analysis of bilingual grammar has been discussed (Chapter 4) with special emphasis on the interaction of sociopragmatic constraints governing the meaning-making mechanism of code-switching. My own research has focused on the examined Hungarian-American immigrant community’s, more particularly on the North Carolina Hungarian Club’s, collective code-switching patterns and on the sociopragmatic functions they fulfill individually (Chapter 7) and in interaction with the others (Chapter 7). The interaction of the constraints has been represented in algorithmic tableaux. As Lalso set out to define the examined Hungarian-American community in its appropriate socio-cognitive dimension, a thorough description has been provided placing the examined community in its relevant socio-historicalcultural macro- (Chapter 5) and micro-context (Chapter 7). Relying on statistically significant correlations in the community’s sociolinguistic characteristics (Chapter 7), two sociolinguistically distinct subcommunities have emerged in the examined community along the lines of intergenerational affiliation — first- and second-generation speakers. In light of the sociolinguistic data, I have argued that the community-specific ranking proposed by Bolonyai and Bhatt?" cannot be applied for describing both first-, 310 Bhatt — Bolonyai, Ibid., 522-546 * 181 °

Structural

Custom

Image Metadata

Image width
1830 px
Image height
2834 px
Image resolution
300 px/inch
Original File Size
919.55 KB
Permalink to jpg
022_000062/0182.jpg
Permalink to ocr
022_000062/0182.ocr

Links

  • L'Harmattan Könyvkiadó
  • Open Access Blog
  • Kiadványaink az MTMT-ben
  • Kiadványaink a REAL-ban
  • CrossRef Works
  • ROR ID

Contact

  • L'Harmattan Szerkesztőség
  • Kéziratleadási szabályzat
  • Peer Review Policy
  • Adatvédelmi irányelvek
  • Dokumentumtár
  • KBART lists
  • eduID Belépés

Social media

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

L'Harmattan Open Access platform

LoginRegister

User login

eduId Login
I forgot my password
  • Search
  • OA Collections
  • L'Harmattan Archive
Englishen
  • Françaisfr
  • Deutschde
  • Magyarhu