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In a social setting where speakers with several languages interact
extensively, a major source of variation in Colloquial Singapore
English comes from the complex interaction between crosslinguistic
influences and various social and linguistic factors. By unifying
both social and linguistic aspects of the phenomenon through the
use of multivariate analyses like logistic regressions and Poisson
regressions, this book represents a novel approach to the study of
crosslinguistic influence in Colloquial Singapore English. As
multivariate analyses provide us with information regarding the
relative strengths of each social and linguistic factor, they are
useful tools that allow us to have a more nuanced understanding of
crosslinguistic influence in contact situations. Linguistic
features from a variety of linguistic domains - morphology,
semantics, and discourse - will be quantified, and statistical
analyses will be run in R to determine the degree to which various
social and linguistic factors affect the extent of crosslinguistic
influence. Well-known Singlish features like the optionality of
past tense and plural marking, the unique meanings of already, got,
and one, and discourse particles lah, leh, and lor, are analyzed
using this approach. The statistical modeling of these features is
a first step towards creating a unified framework to understanding
crosslinguistic influence.
In a social setting where speakers with several languages interact
extensively, a major source of variation in Colloquial Singapore
English comes from the complex interaction between crosslinguistic
influences and various social and linguistic factors. By unifying
both social and linguistic aspects of the phenomenon through the
use of multivariate analyses like logistic regressions and Poisson
regressions, this book represents a novel approach to the study of
crosslinguistic influence in Colloquial Singapore English. As
multivariate analyses provide us with information regarding the
relative strengths of each social and linguistic factor, they are
useful tools that allow us to have a more nuanced understanding of
crosslinguistic influence in contact situations. Linguistic
features from a variety of linguistic domains - morphology,
semantics, and discourse - will be quantified, and statistical
analyses will be run in R to determine the degree to which various
social and linguistic factors affect the extent of crosslinguistic
influence. Well-known Singlish features like the optionality of
past tense and plural marking, the unique meanings of already, got,
and one, and discourse particles lah, leh, and lor, are analyzed
using this approach. The statistical modeling of these features is
a first step towards creating a unified framework to understanding
crosslinguistic influence.
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