Publication | Open Access
Government and code-mixing
381
Citations
12
References
1986
Year
EngineeringIntra-sentential SwitchesTechnology LawSemanticsSyntactic StructureLinguistic TheoryCode-switchingBureaucracySyntaxGovernmental ProcessComputational LinguisticsPolitical ScienceGovernment RegulationGrammarCorpus AnalysisCode SwitchingLanguage StudiesPublic PolicyGrammatical FormalismLanguage ChangeRegulationLinguistic BehaviourLanguage UseFormal SyntaxGovernment RelationGovernment AdministrationLinguistics
The aim of this paper is to argue that the process of code-mixing is constrained by the government relation that holds between the constituents of a sentence. The government constraint replaces a number of specific constraints that have been proposed in the literature to account for apparently ‘impossible’, ‘ungrammatical’ or ‘non-occurring’ types of intra-sentential switches. Code-mixing is a form of linguistic behaviour which produces utterances consisting of elements taken from the lexicons of different languages. Some examples are given in (1).
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