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Socially meaningful syntactic variation in sign-based grammar

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 July 2007

EMILY M. BENDER
Affiliation:
Department of Linguistics, University of Washington, Box 354340, Seattle WA 98195, USAebender@u.washington.edu

Abstract

In this article, I investigate the implications of socially meaningful sociolinguistic variation for competence grammar, working from the point of view of HPSG as a kind of performance-plausible sign-based grammar. Taking data from African American Vernacular English variable copula absence as a case study, I argue that syntactic constraints and social meaning are intertwined. I present an overview of the literature on social meaning, discuss what grammars are models of, and argue that in order to model socially meaningful variation, competence grammars need to be extended to include social meaning, precompiled phrases, and probabilistic or frequentistic information. I then explore different heuristics for defining the boundaries of competence grammar and discuss the commonalities between the proposed additions and the kind of linguistic knowledge which is generally assumed to comprise competence grammar.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Cambridge University Press 2007

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Footnotes

This article is a revision of chapters 5 and 6 of Bender (2001). I am grateful to my dissertation committee (Penny Eckert, Tom Wasow, John Rickford, Ivan Sag, and Arnold Zwicky) for their input and guidance. This article has also benefited from thoughtful comments on an earlier draft by Tom Wasow, Fritz Newmeyer, and two anonymous reviewers. The original work was supported by a Dissertation Fellowship from the Stanford Humanities and Sciences Graduate Alumni Association and a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.