Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-vsgnj Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-17T14:56:03.791Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A community-based test of a linguistic hypothesis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2009

Richard Cameron
Affiliation:
Department of English, The University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL 60607-7120

Abstract

The Functional Compensation Hypothesis (Hochberg 1986a, b) interprets frequent expression of pronominal subjects as compensation for frequent deletion of agreement marking on finite verbs in Puerto Rican Spanish (PRS). Specifically, this applies to 2sg. where variably deleted word-final -s marks agreement. If the hypothesis is correct, finite verbs with agreement deleted in speech should co-occur more frequently with pronominal subjects than finite verbs with agreement intact. Likewise, social dialects which frequently delete agreement should show higher rates of pronominal expression than social dialects which less frequently delete agreement. These auxiliary hypotheses are tested across a socially stratified sample of 62 speakers from San Juan. Functional compensation does show stylistic and social patterning in the category of Specific , not in that of Non-specific . However, Non-specific is the key to frequency differences between -s-deleting PRS and -s-conserving Madrid; hence the Functional Compensation Hypothesis should be discarded. (Functionalism, compensation, null subject, analogy, Spanish, Puerto Rico)

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Adams, Marianne P. (1987). From Old French to the theory of pro-drop. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 5:132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adamson, H.D., & Regan, Vera (1991). The acquisition of community speech norms by Asian immigrants learning English as a second language: A preliminary study. Studies in Second Language Acquisition 13:122.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alba, Orlando (1990). Variación fonetica y diversidad social en el Español Dominicano de Santiago. Santiago, República Dominicana: Universidad Católica Madre y Maestra.Google Scholar
Alvar, Manuel (1955). Las hablas meridionales de España y su interés para la lingüística comparada. Revista de Filología Española 39:284313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alvar, Manuel (1975). La suerte de la -s en el mediodía de España. In Teoría linguística de las regiones, 6390. Barcelona: Editorial Planeta.Google Scholar
Álvarez Nazario, Manuel (1990). El habla campesina del país: Orígenes y desarrollo del español en Puerto Rico. Río Piedras, PR: Editorial de la Universidad de Puerto Rico.Google Scholar
Anttila, Raimo (1972). Historical and comparative linguistics. Amsterdam: Benjamins.Google Scholar
Ariel, Mira (1990). Accessing noun-phrase antecedents. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Ariel, Mira (1991). The function of accessibility in a theory of grammar. Journal of Pragmatics 16:443–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Avila-Jiménez, Bárbara (1994). Social variables and pronominal overtness in Puerto Rican Spanish. Paper presented at NWAV-XXIII, Stanford.Google Scholar
Barrenechea, Ana Maria, & Alonso, Alicia (1977). Los pronombres personales sujetos en el español hablado en Buenos Aires. In Blanch, Juan Lope (ed.), Estudios sobre el español hablado en las principales ciudades de América, 333–49. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Bell, Allan (1984). Language style as audience design. Language in Society 13:145204CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bentivoglio, Paula (1983). Topic continuity and discontinuity in discourse: A study of spoken Latin-American Spanish. In Givón, (ed.), 255311.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bentivoglio, Paula (1987). Los sujetos pronominales de primera persona en el habla de Caracas. Caracas: Universidad Central de Venezuela, Consejo de Desarrollo Científico y Humanístico.Google Scholar
Cameron, Richard (1990). Variable constraints on the alternation of pronominal and empty subjects in Puerto Rican Spanish. Paper presented at NWAV-XIX, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Cameron, Richard (1992). Pronominal and null subject variation in Spanish: Constraints, dialects, and functional compensation. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. [Distributed as IRCS Report 92–22 by The Institute for Research in Cognitive Science, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.]Google Scholar
Cameron, Richard (1993). Ambiguous agreement, functional compensation, and nonspecific in the Spanish of San Juan, Puerto Rico and Madrid, Spain. Language Variation and Change 5:305–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cameron, Richard (1994). Switch reference, verb class, and priming in a variable syntax. In Beals, Katherine et al. . (eds.), Chicago Linguistic Society 30, vol. 2: The parasession on variation and linguistic theory, 2745.Google Scholar
Cameron, Richard (1995). The scope and limits of switch reference as a constraint on pronominal subject expression. Hispanic Linguistics, to appear.Google Scholar
Cameron, Richard, & DeChicchis, Joseph (1989). Semantic field, linguistic geography, and semantic change: Original Spanish vocabulary in Kekchi. Penn Review of Linguistics 13:91105.Google Scholar
Campbell, Lyle (1975). Constraints on sound change. In Dahlstedt, Karl-Hampus (ed.), The Nordic languages and modern linguistics 2, 388406. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell.Google Scholar
Canfield, Delos Lincoln (1981). Spanish pronunciation in the Americas. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Cedergren, Henrietta (1973). The interplay of social and linguistic factors in Panama. Ph.D. dissertation, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Chafe, Wallace (1987). Cognitive constraints on information flow. In Tomlin, Russell (ed.), Coherence and grounding in discourse, 2151. Philadelphia: Benjamins.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chastain, Charles (1975). Reference and context. In Gunderson, Keith (ed.), Language, mind, and knowledge (Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science, 7), 194269. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Cifuentes, Hugo (1980). Presencia y ausencia del pronombre personal sujeto en el habla culta de Santiago de Chile. Homenaje a Ambrosio Rabanales (Boletín de Filología de la Universidad de Chile, 31). 743–52.Google Scholar
Cole, Peter (1978), ed. Pragmatics. (Syntax and semantics, 9.) New York: Academic Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donnellan, Keith (1978). Speaker reference, descriptions, and anaphora. In Cole, (ed.), 4768.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DuBois, John (1985). Competing motivations. In Haiman, John (ed.), Iconicity in syntax, 343–65. Amsterdam: Benjamins.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eckert, Penelope (1989). The whole woman: Sex and gender differences in variation. Language Variation and Change 1:245–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eid, Mushira (1983). On the communicative function of subject pronouns in Arabic. Journal of Linguistics 19:287303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Enç, Mürvet (1991). The semantics of specificity. Linguistic Inquiry 22:125.Google Scholar
Enríquez, Emilia V. (1984). El pronombre personal sujeto en la lengua española hablada en Madrid. Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Instituto Miguel de Cervantes.Google Scholar
Esgueva, Manuel, & Cantarero, Margarita (1981), eds. El habla de la ciudad de Madrid: Materiales para su estudio. Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Instituto Miguel de Cervantes.Google Scholar
Ewert, Alfred (1961). The French language, 2nd ed. London: Faber & Faber.Google Scholar
Fasold, Ralph (1990). The sociolinguistics of language. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Fontanella de Weinberg, María (1974). Un aspecto sociolingüístico del español bonaerense: La -s en Bahía Blanca. Bahia Blanca, Argentina: Cuadernos de Lingiüística.Google Scholar
Foulet, L.. (1935). L'extension de la forme oblique du pronom personnel en ancien fran÷ais. Romania 61:257315.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Givón, Talmy (1983a), ed.. Topic continuity in discourse: A quantitative cross-language study. Amsterdam: Benjamins.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Givón, Talmy (1983b). Topic continuity in discourse: An introduction. In Givón, (ed.), 141.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grice, H. Paul (1975). Logic and conversation. In Cole, Peter & Morgan, Jerry (eds.), Speech acts (Syntax and semantics, 3), 4158. New York: Academic Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grice, H. Paul (1978). Further notes on logic and conversation. In Cole, (ed.), 113–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gundel, Jeannette; Hedberg, Nancy; & Zacharski, Ron (1993). Cognitive status and the form of referring expressions in discourse. Language 69:274307.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guy, Gregory (1980). Variation in the group and the individual: The case of final stop deletion. In Labov, (ed.), 136.Google Scholar
Guy, Gregory (1988). Language and social class. In Newmeyer, Frederick (ed.), Linguistics, The Cambridge survey, IV: Language, The socio-cultural context, 3763. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guy, Gregory (1991). Explanation in variable phonology: An exponential model of morphological constraints. Language Variation and Change 3:122.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guy, Gregory & Boyd, Sally (1990). The development of a morphological class. Language Variation and Change 2:118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harris, Martin (1978). The interrelationship between phonological and grammatical change. In Fisiak, Jacek (ed.), Recent developments in historical phonology, 159–72. The Hague: Mouton.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heath, Jeffrey (1975). Some functional relationships in grammar. Language 51:89104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hernanz, Ma. Lluïsa (1990). En torno a los sujetos arbitrarios: La 2a persona del singular. In Demonte, Violeta & Cuarón, Beatriz Garza (eds.), Estudios de lingüística de España y México, 151&78. Mexico: Colegio de México.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herold, Ruth (1990). Mechanisms of merger: The implementation and distribution of the low back merger in Eastern Pennsylvania. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Hindle, Donald (1980). The social and structural conditioning of phonetic variation. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Hochberg, Judith (1986a). Functional compensation for /-s/ deletion in Puerto Rican Spanish. Language 62:609–21CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hochberg, Judith (1986b). /-s/ deletion and pronoun usage in Puerto Rican Spanish. In Sankoff, David (ed.), Diversity and diachrony, 199210. Amsterdam: Benjamins.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hock, Hans H. (1986). Principles of historical linguistics. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holmes, Janet, & Bell, Allan (1992). On shear markets and sharing sheep: The merger of EAR and AIR diphthongs in New Zealand English. Language Variation and Change 4:251–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horn, Laurence (1984). Toward a new taxonomy for pragmatic inference: Q-based and R-based implicature. In Schiffrin, Deborah (ed.), Meaning, form, and use in context: Linguistic applications (GURT '84), 1142. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press.Google Scholar
Huang, Yan (1991). A neo-Gricean pragmatic theory of anaphora. Journal of Linguistics 27:301–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Itkonen, Esa (1983). Causality in linguistic theory. London: Croom Helm.Google Scholar
King, Robert (1967). Functional load and sound change. Language 43:831–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kiparsky, Paul (1972). Explanation in phonology. In Peters, Stanley (ed.), Goals of linguistic theory, 189227. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.Google Scholar
Kroch, Anthony (1978). Toward a theory of social dialect variation. Language in Society 7:1736.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kroch, Anthony (1989). Reflexes of grammar in patterns of language change. Language Variation and Change 1:199244.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kroch, Anthony, & Small, Cathy (1978). Grammatical ideology and its effect on speech. In Sankoff, David (ed.), Linguistic variation: Models and methods, 4555. New York: Academic.Google Scholar
Laberge, Suzanne, & Sankoff, Gillian (1986). Anything you can do. In Sankoff, Gillian, The social life of language, 271–93. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Labov, William (1966). The social stratification of English in New York City. Washington, DC: Center for Applied Linguistics.Google Scholar
Labov, William (1980), ed. Locating language in space and time. New York: Academic.Google Scholar
Labov, William (1984). Field methods of the project on linguistic change. In Baugh, John & Sherzer, Joel (eds.), Language in use: Readings in sociolinguistics, 2853. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.Google Scholar
Labov, William (1987). The overestimation of functionalism. In Dirven, René & Fried, Vilém (eds.), Functionalism in linguistics (Linguistic and literary studies in Eastern Europe, 20), 311–32. Amsterdam: Benjamins.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Labov, William (1989). The child as linguistic historian. Language Variation and Change 1:8597.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Labov, William (1990). The intersection of sex and social class in the course of linguistic change. Language Variation and Change 2:205–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Labov, William (1994). Principles of linguistic change: Internal factors. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Labov, William; Cohen, Paul; Robins, Clarence; & Lewis, John (1968). A study of the nonstandard English used by Negro and Puerto Rican speakers in New York City. 2 vols. (Cooperative Research Report 3288.) Philadelphia: U.S. Regional Survey, University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Labov, William; Karen, Mark; & Miller, Corey (1991). Near-mergers and the suspension of phonemic contrast. Language Variation and Change 3:3374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lafford, Barbara (1989). Is functionalism a fact? Data from the Caribbean. Hispanic Linguistics 3:4974.Google Scholar
Lass, Roger (1980). On explaining language change. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Levelt, Willem (1989). Speaking: From intention to articulation. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Levinson, Stephen (1991). Pragmatic reduction of the binding conditions revisited. Journal of Linguistics 27:107–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lipski, John (1985). The Spanish of Equatorial Guinea: The dialect of Malabo and its implications for Spanish dialectology. Tübingen: Niemeyer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lira, Solange de Azambuja (1982). Nominal, pronominal, and zero subjects in Brazilian Portuguese. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
López Morales, Humberto (1983). Estratificación social del español de San Juan de Puerto Rico. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
López Morales, Humberto (1989). Sociolingüística. Madrid: Gredos.Google Scholar
Ma, Roxana, & Herasimchuk, Eleanor (1975). The linguistic dimensions of a bilingual neighborhood. In Fishman, Joshua et al. (eds.), Bilingualism in the barrio, 2nd ed., 347479. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Mahajan, Anoop (1991). Operator movement, agreement, and referentiality. MIT Working Papers in Linguistics 15:7796.Google Scholar
Marslen-Wilson, William et al. , (1982). Producing interpretable discourse. In Jarvella, Robert & Klein, Wolfgang (eds.), Speech, place, and action, 339–78. New York: Wiley.Google Scholar
Medina-Rivera, Antonio (1991). Interaction of (s) and subject expression in the Spanish of Choluteca and El Paraíso, Honduras. Paper presented at NWAV-XX, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Miró Vera, Ramona, & Pineda, Miguel Ángel de (1982). Determinación sociolingüística de la presencia/ausencia del pronombre personal sujeto. In Plaja, M. Teresa Palet (ed.), Sociolingüística andaluza 5: Habla de Sevilla y hablas Americanas, 3744. Seville: Universidad de Sevilla.Google Scholar
Mondejar, José (1979). El verbo andaluz: Formas y estructuras. Madrid: Consejo Superior de lnvestigaciones Científicas, Instituto Miguel de Cervantes.Google Scholar
Morales, Amparo (1986). La expresión de sujeto pronominal en el español de Puerto Rico. In Grámaticas en contacto: Análisis sintácticos sobre el español de Puerto Rico, 89100. San Juan, PR: Playor.Google Scholar
Morales, Amparo (1989). Hacia un universal sintáctico del español del Caribe: El orden SVO. Anuario de Lingüística Hispánica 5:139–52.Google Scholar
Newmeyer, Frederick (1994). Competing motivations and synchronic analysis. Sprachtypologie und Universalienforschung 2:6777.Google Scholar
Nyman, Martti (1987). Is the paradigm economy principle relevant? Journal of Linguistics 23:251–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olsen, Leslie, & Huckin, Thomas (1983). Principles of communication for science and technology. New York: McGraw-Hill.Google Scholar
Paredes, Silva, Vera, Lúcia (1993). Subject omission and functional compensation: Evidence from written Brazilian Portuguese. Language Variation and Change 5:3549.Google Scholar
Pineda, Miguel Ángel de (1982), ed. Sociolingüística andaluza, 2: Materia de encuestas para el estudio del habla urbana culta de Sevilla. Seville: Universidad de Sevilla.Google Scholar
Poplack, Shana (1979). Function and process in a variable phonology. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Poplack, Shana (1980a). Deletion and disambiguation in Puerto Rican Spanish. Language 56:371–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poplack, Shana (1980b). The notion of plural in Puerto Rican Spanish: Competing constraints on /-s/ deletion. In Labov, (ed.), 5568.Google Scholar
Poplack, Shana (1981). Mortal phonemes as plural morphemes. In Sankoff, David & Cedergren, Henrietta (eds.), Variation omnibus, 5971. Carbondale, IL: Linguistic Research.Google Scholar
Popper, Karl (1959). The logic of scientific discovery. London: Hutchinson.Google Scholar
Prince, Ellen (1981). Toward a taxonomy of given-new information. In Cole, Peter (ed.), Radical Pragmatics, 223–55. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Pulgram, Ernst (1983). The reduction and elimination of redundancy. In Agard, Frederick et al. (eds.), Essays in honor of Charles F. Hockett, 107–25. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Ranson, Diana (1991). Person marking in the wake of /s/ deletion in Andalusian Spanish. Language Variation and Change 3:133–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ranson, Diana (1992). Nominal number marking in Andalusian Spanish in the wake of /-s/ deletion. Hispanic Linguistics 4:301–27.Google Scholar
Ranson, Diana (1993). The interaction of linguistic and contextual number markers in Andalusian Spanish. Hispania 76:919–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Riemsdijk, Henk van, & Williams, Edwin (1986). Introduction to the theory of grammar. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Sabater, Maximiliano (1978). Estructuras morfosintáticas en el español dominicano: Algunas implicaciones sociolingüísticas. In Morales, Humberto López (ed.), Corrientes actuales en la dialectología del caribe hispánico, 167–80. Río Piedras, PR: Editorial Universitaria.Google Scholar
Santa Ana, Otto (1992). Chicano English evidence for the exponential hypothesis: A variable rule pervades lexical phonology. Language Variation and Change 4:275–88.Google Scholar
Sapir, Edward (1921). Language. New York: Harcourt Brace.Google Scholar
Schiffrin, Deborah (1987). Discourse markers. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seklaoui, Diana (1989). Change and compensation: Parallel weakening off[s] in Italian, French, and Spanish. New York: Lang.Google Scholar
Sigler, Michele (1992). Number agreement and specificity in Armenian. Chicago Linguistic Society 28:1.499514.Google Scholar
Silva-Corvalán, Carmen (1982). Subject expression and placement in Mexican-American Spanish. In Amastae, Jon & Elías-Olivares, Lucía (eds.), Spanish in the United States: Sociolinguistic aspects, 93120. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Silva-Corválan, Carmen (1994). Language contact and change: Spanish in Los Angeles. Oxford: Clarendon.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suñer, Margarita (1982). On null subjects. Linguistic Analysis 9: 5578.Google Scholar
Suñer, Margarita (1983). proarb. Linguistic Inquiry 14:188–91.Google Scholar
Suñer, Margarita (1990). Impersonal se passives and the licensing of empty categories. Probus 2:209–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Terrell, Tracy (1978). Sobre la aspiración y elisión de /-s/ implosiva y final en el español de Puerto Rico. Nueva Revista de Filología Hispánica 27:2438.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toribio, Almeida Jacqueline (1993). Parametric variation in the licensing of nominals. Ph.D. dissertation, Cornell University.Google Scholar
Trudgill, Peter (1974). The social differentiation of English in Norwich. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Vennemann, Theo (1975). An explanation of drift. In Li, Charles (ed.), Word order and word order change, 269305. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Vincent, Diane, & Sankoff, David (1992). Punctors: A pragmatic variable. Language Variation and Change 4:205–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vincent, Nigel (1978). Is sound change teleological? In Fisiak, Jacek (ed.), Recent developments in historical phonology, 409–30. The Hague: Mouton.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vogel, Irene, & Kenesei, István (1990). Syntax and semantics in phonology. In Inkelas, Sharon & Zee, Draga (eds.), The phonology-syntax connection, 339–63. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Wainerman, Catalina (1976). Sociolingüística de la forma pronominal. Mexico: Trillas.Google Scholar
Wallace, Rex (1981). The variable deletion of final S in Plautus. Master's thesis, Ohio State University.Google Scholar
Wallace, Rex (1984). Variable deletion of -s in Latin: Its consequences for Romance. In Baldi, Philip (ed.), Papers from the XIIth Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages, 565–77. Amsterdam: Benjamins.Google Scholar
Young, Richard (1993). Functional constraints on variation in interlanguage morphology. Applied Linguistics 14:7697.CrossRefGoogle Scholar