2009
DOI: 10.1075/sibil.41.14can
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10. Adjectives and word order: A focus on Italian-German code-switching

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Cited by 31 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…Hence, we investigate what happens when an adjective from one language is combined with a noun from the other. Cantone and MacSwan (2009) argue that the language of the adjective determines word order, predicting wijn kòrá and rode biña, and excluding biña rode or kòrá wijn. Following Myers-Scotton (2002), by contrast, the word order is expected to follow that of the morphosyntax in the rest of the sentence, predicting wijn kòrá and biña rode when the morphosyntax of the rest of the sentence is in Papiamento, but rode biña and kòrá wijn when the rest of the sentence is in Dutch.…”
Section: Adjective-noun Switches In Papiamento-dutchmentioning
confidence: 96%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Hence, we investigate what happens when an adjective from one language is combined with a noun from the other. Cantone and MacSwan (2009) argue that the language of the adjective determines word order, predicting wijn kòrá and rode biña, and excluding biña rode or kòrá wijn. Following Myers-Scotton (2002), by contrast, the word order is expected to follow that of the morphosyntax in the rest of the sentence, predicting wijn kòrá and biña rode when the morphosyntax of the rest of the sentence is in Papiamento, but rode biña and kòrá wijn when the rest of the sentence is in Dutch.…”
Section: Adjective-noun Switches In Papiamento-dutchmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…MacSwan (1999) has criticized the MLF -arguing that the grammatical principles responsible for defining the distribution of code-switching explicitly refer to the separate languages involved in it. Regarding adjective order, Cantone and MacSwan (2009) follow Cinque's (1994Cinque's ( , 1999Cinque's ( , 2005 proposal that a Universal Base underlies adjectives, with adjectives universally preceding the noun. Cantone and MacSwan explore Italian-German naturalistic code-switching data and reach the descriptive generalization that "while the data remain slightly ambiguous, a relatively clear pattern has emerged in both the survey data and the naturalistic data confirming the general view of previous researchers, namely, that the word order requirements of the language of the adjective determine word order in code-switching in DP-internal contexts" (2009, pp.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The predictions with regard to word order in codeswitched DPs have been discussed in Cantone and MacSwan (2009). Recall that movement during the derivation is caused by (strong) features.…”
Section: The Minimalist Programmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cantone and MacSwan (2009) would predict wine coch and red gwin (where the language of the adjective determines the word order), and would exclude gwin red and coch wine. Do we expect Welsh-English bilingual speech to produce gwin red or red gwin, and coch wine or wine coch?…”
Section: Welsh-english Conflict Sitesmentioning
confidence: 99%