On the syntax of spatial adpositions in sign languages
| Authors | |
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| Publication date | 2012 |
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| Book title | Proceedings of IATL 2011 |
| Series | MIT Working Papers in Linguistics |
| Event | 27th annual meeting of the Israeli Association of Theoretical Linguistics (IATL) |
| Pages (from-to) | 83-104 |
| Publisher | Cambridge, MA: MITWPL |
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| Abstract |
In investigations of sign language grammar - phonology, morphology, and syntax - the impact of language modality on grammar is a recurrent issue. The term 'modality,' as used in this context, refers to the distinction between languages that are expressed and perceived in the oral-auditive modality (i.e. spoken languages) and those that are expressed and perceived in the gestural-visual modality (i.e. sign languages). Since the 1960s, an impressive body of research on various sign languages has demonstrated that many aspects of sign language grammar are in fact modality-independent and that theoretical models that were developed on the basis of spoken language can thus also account for sign language structures (see Sandler & Lillo-Martin (2006) for an overview). In this paper, we will claim modality-independence, at least from a structural point of view, for an area of sign language grammar that appears to be clearly shaped by the visual-gestural modality: the use of space in locative constructions. In the remainder of the introduction, we will address the use of signing space and sketch what a 'canonical' locative construction in sign language looks like.
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| Document type | Conference contribution |
| Language | English |
| Published at | http://www.iatl.org.il/wp-content/files/27/Pfau-Aboh.pdf |
| Other links | http://mitwpl.mit.edu/catalog/mwpl65/ |
| Downloads |
Pfau-Aboh.pdf
(Final published version)
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