This contribution addresses a number of conceptual and methodological issues regarding processes of dialect change leading to koineization. After a discussion of some notions and key findings from a few recent relevant studies concerning present-day Dutch dialects, two paradigms of linguistic theorizing will be briefly presented. Next, these paradigms will be compared on the basis of the findings from a recent diachronic study of the deletion of postvocalic /r/ before coronal obstruents. It will be shown that only one of the paradigms survives this test. As to the internal factors, the study offers evidence for the claim that, as far as phonological and morphophonological variation is concerned, the place of a given dialect feature in the t...
Rhotics, or r-sounds, are known to display a large amount of variation, both cross-linguistically an...
This study focuses on the dialect vitality in Flanders anno 2013. On the basis of a survey conducted...
Koineization as language change Several chapters in this volume [those by Gordon, Bailey, Klemola an...
The paper discusses variation and change in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Dutch, reviewing the...
The Dutch dialects display massive variation in their verbal paradigms. Traditionally, this variatio...
In this paper we review the phonological component of Dutch in Taalportaal, a website discussing the...
The theme of this end term paper is the Dutch dialects and the use of the Limburgian dialect. The go...
The present paper revisits Neuckerman’s (2008) proposal concerning the geographic distribution and d...
Contemporary research on the social meaning of variation has shown that in situation of language var...
The Low Countries are famous for their radically changing landscape over the last 1,000 years. Like ...
Germanic preterite morphology has been the subject of a bewildering number of studies, looking espec...
Feature Economy (Clements, 2003) is the hypothesis that “if a feature is used once in a system, it w...
The goal of this article is to provide a detailed analysis of DP-internal pronominalization patterns...
Dutch schwa-epenthesis in liquid+consonant clusters has been the subject of a “boundary dispute”, as...
The aim of this paper is twofold. The first section summarises what little is known about the acquis...
Rhotics, or r-sounds, are known to display a large amount of variation, both cross-linguistically an...
This study focuses on the dialect vitality in Flanders anno 2013. On the basis of a survey conducted...
Koineization as language change Several chapters in this volume [those by Gordon, Bailey, Klemola an...
The paper discusses variation and change in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Dutch, reviewing the...
The Dutch dialects display massive variation in their verbal paradigms. Traditionally, this variatio...
In this paper we review the phonological component of Dutch in Taalportaal, a website discussing the...
The theme of this end term paper is the Dutch dialects and the use of the Limburgian dialect. The go...
The present paper revisits Neuckerman’s (2008) proposal concerning the geographic distribution and d...
Contemporary research on the social meaning of variation has shown that in situation of language var...
The Low Countries are famous for their radically changing landscape over the last 1,000 years. Like ...
Germanic preterite morphology has been the subject of a bewildering number of studies, looking espec...
Feature Economy (Clements, 2003) is the hypothesis that “if a feature is used once in a system, it w...
The goal of this article is to provide a detailed analysis of DP-internal pronominalization patterns...
Dutch schwa-epenthesis in liquid+consonant clusters has been the subject of a “boundary dispute”, as...
The aim of this paper is twofold. The first section summarises what little is known about the acquis...
Rhotics, or r-sounds, are known to display a large amount of variation, both cross-linguistically an...
This study focuses on the dialect vitality in Flanders anno 2013. On the basis of a survey conducted...
Koineization as language change Several chapters in this volume [those by Gordon, Bailey, Klemola an...