Periodic Reporting for period 2 - CompSubjInf (Competition between subjunctive and infinitive in the history of German, Balkan Slavic and Romance languages)
Período documentado: 2023-09-01 hasta 2024-08-31
The project studied a number of representative languages pertaining to the broader linguistic groups outlined above: German in the context of Germanic; French (and to a lesser extent Italian and Spanish) in the context of Romance; and Balkan Slavic (e.g. Bulgarian, Serbian) in the context of Balkan languages. The overall objectives of the project were two-fold: (i) describe the evolving diachronic tendencies in relation to CompSubjInf in languages under study (the descriptive/quantitative aspect of the project); (ii) develop a theoretical analysis that explains the underlying reasons (both linguistic and extra-linguistic) behind the observed developments (the explanatory/qualitative aspect of the project). In addition to advancing linguistic study, the research conducted within the project also has broader social relevance. On the one hand, it expands our knowledge of the cultural and linguistic heritage of European peoples. On the other hand, the project contributes to our understanding of language as a living and evolving entity, thus countering the overly prescriptive and purist linguistic ideologies which pretend that standard languages should be resistant to any change.
The main result on the quantitative side of the study were large data sets illustrating the changing historical patterns pertaining to CompSubjInf in languages under study. The obtained data sets were divided by language (e.g. Bulgarian, German, French etc.), by historical period (with sub-periods of about two centuries each) and by the syntactic context (e.g. main clauses, adjunct clauses, and different types of embedded complement clauses). The patterns of Subj vs Inf use across these different independent variables were then quantified and statistically analyzed. The statistical descriptions that were obtained in this context then served as input for the qualitative study of the historical tendencies pertaining to CompSubjInf. The theoretical approach that was subsequently developed resulted in a multi-factorial analysis of the phenomenon under study (described in more detail below), which was disseminated in a number of publications and conference presentations.
The general historical trajectory pertaining to CompSubjInf can be described in terms of a gradual retreat of Inf in favor of Subj. This development was observed to varying degrees in both Balkan Slavic and Romance languages. The tendency towards replacement of Inf by Subj was couched within the broader grammatical evolution affecting (at least) the Indo-European linguistic family. The evolution in question can be described in terms of a development of more articulated syntactic structures, which allowed for more efficient language processing thanks to the greater range of specialized functional projections they contained. This broader development favored the use of Subj over Inf, given that the former are more syntactically articulated than the latter. Nevertheless, Inf remained in relatively stable use cross-linguistically in those sentences where the subject of the main clause and the embedded clause is the same (so-called control complements). This was explained by referring to a competing typological principle, namely the tendency towards avoiding redundant linguistic representations. The use of finite Subj morphology in control complements would require that the person and number features associated with the main-clause subject be redundantly realized both on the main and on the embedded verb. Hence the use of Inf (which does not realize any person and number features) is favored in this type of clauses cross-linguistically.
In relation to languages under study, it was shown that the CompSubjInf patterns in Romance were mostly driven by broader typological mechanisms, as these languages largely lost the use of Inf in non-control but kept it in control contexts. Balkan Slavic developments, on the other hand, were partly driven by local language-contact pressures, specifically in those instances where Subj replaced Inf in control complements. These developments were explained as a function of the multilingual socio-cultural setting that characterized the Balkan region through history. In such a context, where speakers would often communicate in non-native languages, the typological constraint against redundancy in language was relaxed, because redundant repetition of certain linguistic information (e.g. the person and number features of the subject in case of Balkan control Subj complements) increased the likelihood that this information would be correctly interpreted by non-native speakers. This is just one illustration of how local pressures may interact with broader typological mechanisms in order to guide linguistic change in different directions.