Emergence or Grammaticalization? The Case of Negation in Kata Kolok
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. On the Emergence of Structure in Visual Communication Systems
2.1. Emergence
2.2. Grammaticalization: A Special Case of Language Change in Sign Languages
3. Negation: A Typological Overview
3.1. Spoken Languages
(1) | a. | Saya | tidur | ||
I | asleep | ||||
‘I am asleep.’ | |||||
b. | Saya | tidak | tidur | ||
a. | I | neg | asleep | ||
‘I am not asleep.’ | [Indonesian; Dahl (2011, p. 19)] |
(2) | a. | Oku- | yor- | um | ||
read- | prog- | 1sg | ||||
‘I am reading.’ | ||||||
b. | Oku- | mu- | yor- | um | ||
read- | neg- | prog | 1sg | |||
‘I am not reading.’ | [Turkish; Dahl (2011, p. 14)] |
(3) | wajjan- | be | jopa | apänchi- | yo- | be | |
1.incl- | du | neg | drink.1.incl- | neg- | du | ||
‘We two do not drink.’ | |||||||
[Cuiba; Mosonyi et al. 2000, in Miestamo (2005, p. 156)] |
(4) | a. | mɔ́- | tá | |||
3.fut- | go | |||||
‘He will go.’ | ||||||
b. | mɔ̀- | tá | ||||
3.neg- | go | |||||
‘He won’t go.’ | [Mbembe; Dahl (2011, p. 17)] |
3.2. Sign Languages
_ _ _ _ | _ _ _ | hs | |||||
(5) | a. | santi | meat | eat | not | ||
‘Santi doesn’t eat meat.’ | [LSC; Quer (2012, p. 318)] | ||||||
hs | |||||||
b. | paolo | contract | sign | non | |||
‘Paolo didn’t sign the contract.’ | [LIS; Geraci (2005, p. 221)] |
_ _ _ _ | hs | ||||||
(6) | a. | santi | meat | eat | |||
‘Santi doesn’t eat meat.’ | [LSC; Quer (2012, p. 318)] | ||||||
(______ | (__________ | (____ | (__hs) | ||||
b. | paolo | contract | sign | ||||
‘Paolo didn’t sign the contract.’ | [LIS; Geraci (2005, p. 221)] |
4. Kata Kolok
4.1. Community Characteristics
4.2. Typological Sketch
4.3. Previous Work on Negation in Kata Kolok
4.4. Focus of the Present Study
5. Methodology
5.1. Data
5.2. Coding and Procedure
6. Results
6.1. Manual Marking
hs | |||||||||||
(7) | a. | bi1 | ix‘locative’ | ix‘locative’ | coffee | neg | |||||
‘I don’t take my coffee over here.’8 | [GD3jan7 00:27:55.880] | ||||||||||
tp | tp | |||||||||
b. | spray | rain | neg | rain | neg | |||||
‘No rain came after the pesticides had been sprayed.’ | ||||||||||
[SuJu16jan7 00:16:21.209] |
c. | drink | sweet | neg | |||||||
‘She does not drink tea.’ | [PiKe4jan7 00:16:14.000] |
6.2. Non-Manual Marking
6.2.1. Scope of the Headshake
hs | |||||||||||
(8) | a. | think | ix2 | money | give | neg | |||||
‘You know, he does not give me money.’ | [SuJu16jan7 00:04:06.600] | ||||||||||
hs | ||||||||||
b. | time | nine | neg | time | eight | bi1 | talk | |||
‘I was told to come at eight o’clock in the morning, not at nine.’ | ||||||||||
[PiKe4jan7 00:04:20.000] | ||||||||||
hs | ||||||||||
c. | angry | bi1 | neg | |||||||
‘Me, I am not angry.’ | [GD3jan7 00:12:39.360] | |||||||||
6.2.2. Tongue Protrusion
tp | tp | |||||||||
(9) | a. | spray | rain | neg | rain | neg | ||||
‘No rain came after the pesticides had been sprayed.’ | ||||||||||
[SuJu16jan7 00:16:21.209] |
hs+tp | ||||||||||
b. | sign-namea | sign-nameb | neg | |||||||
‘A and B are not coming to the event.’ | [GD3jan7 00:08:54.100] |
tp | ||||||||||
c. | sign-namea | fishing | good | |||||||
‘A did not catch anything.’ | [SuJu16jan7 00:13:03.780] | |||||||||
hs+tp | ||||||||||
d. | bi1 | drunk | ix‘locative’ | |||||||
‘I hadn’t been drinking over there.’ | [PiKe4jan7 14:31.500] | |||||||||
tp | ||||||||||
(10) | a. | high-price | money | all | ||||||
‘Everything is expensive.’ | [SuJu16jan7 00:17:14] | |||||||||
tp | ||||||||||
b. | rub-clean | finish | good | |||||||
‘It is good when your hands are completely clean (from the leftover food).’ | ||||||||||
[GD3jan7 00:15:22] | ||||||||||
6.2.3. Choice of Non-Manual Marker
hs | |||||||||
(11) | a. | bi1 | twice-married | ||||||
‘I won’t get married a second time.’ | [GD3jan7 00:30:31.119] |
hs | |||||||||
b. | rice | ||||||||
‘I don’t bring any rice.’ | [PiKe4jan7 00:13:41.000] |
hs | |||||||||
c. | motorbike | ||||||||
‘He does not like driving the motorbike.’ | [GD3jan7 00:49:02.470] |
7. Discussion
7.1. Kata Kolok Negation in Typological Perspective
7.2. Emergence of Structure in the Domain of Negation
- The combination of neg and headshake is the most common strategy across all three generations.
- There is a trend towards an increased engagement of the manual particle over the three generations.
- Signers from the youngest generation make use of a greater range of combinatorial variants of neg, headshake, or/and tongue protrusion.
- The use of independent non-manual markers slowly decreases over time.
- The frequency of headshake spreading increases considerably in generation V.
8. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Coding Scheme
Tier Name | Function | Code |
manual (dom./non-dom) | glosses | |
non-manual | tongue protrusion | |
non-manual_head | headshake | |
translation | translation into English | |
negation | marks instance of negation indicates the signer | |
negation category | specifies the negation category | refusal, non-existence, denial |
constituent order | position of the negator in relation to predicate, subject and object | |
combined form | manual negator co-articulated with non-manual elements | 0 (absent) 1 (present) |
pt function | function of tongue protrusion | 0 (absent), gestural, lexical, death marker, negative evaluation, negation |
negation type | specifies the type of negation | standard negation negative imperative negative completive negative modal negative interjection negative existential negative contrast |
NEG presence | presence of manual negator | 0 (absent) 1 (present) |
hs presence | presence of headshake | 0 (absent) 1 (present) |
pt presence | presence of tongue protrusion | 0 (absent) 1 (present) |
hs spreading | presence of headshake spreading | 0 (absent) 1 (present) |
Comment | additional comment |
1 | Language-external factors include processes like standardization (e.g., Schermer 2003) and borrowing—be it from another sign language or the surrounding spoken language, e.g., in the form of mouthings or fingerspelling (Brentari 2001). Fischer (1975) describes how due to external factors, i.e., contact with English, word order in American Sign Language has changed from SOV to SVO. |
2 | Other, far less common, strategies are higher negative verbs and negative auxiliaries (Payne 1985), but these will not be considered here. |
3 | In some sign languages of the Eastern Mediterranean region, besides a headshake, a backward head tilt is also used as a non-manual marker of negation (e.g., Gökgöz 2011 for Turkish Sign Language; Hendriks 2008 for Jordanian Sign Language); this is clearly an areal feature, as a backward head tilt is also used as a negative co-speech gesture in that region. Moreover, for Chinese Sign Language, it has been claimed that a negative facial expression functions as the main non-manual device for negating a clause while a headshake alone cannot yield a negative interpretation (Yang and Fischer 2002). Except for a brief note when discussing Auslan below, we will not further address these non-manual markers (see also Zeshan 2004), but in Section 6.2.2, we add to the typological picture another non-manual marker, viz. tongue protrusion. |
4 | Following the convention in sign language linguistics, signs are represented as glosses in small caps (gloss). Examples are accompanied by video stills where available. Written examples of signed sentences are represented in three lines, one including the non-manual markers, one including the glosses, and a free translation. Non-manual markers are represented in common letters with an underscore line indicating the scope of the respective marker and brackets to indicate where the spreading of the non-manual is optional. Glosses are provided in English throughout. |
5 | The software is accessible from http://tla.mpi.nl/tools/tla-tools/elan/, (accessed on 19 December 2021). |
6 | As pointed out in the section on the typology of negation, our study focuses on standard negation. Still, for the sake of completeness, we want to point out that the corpus search also yielded numerous examples of other negation strategies, namely negative existentials (89 instances), negative imperatives (78 instances), and negative interjections (69 instances). |
7 | Values do not add up to 100% since the manual particle may combine with one or even both of the non-manual markers listed here. |
8 | bi1represents the gloss for a first-person-pointing with a flat-b-handshape. ix is generally used for a pointing sign, specifying ix’locative’ for locative reference and ix2 for a second-person point. Note that non-manuals may be more clearly visible in the video clips provided on the OSF page than in the stills. |
9 | In addition to the descriptive statistics provided in the main text, we also used a linear mixed effect model in R (R Core Team 2019), using the lme4 package (Bates et al. 2015), to determine whether generation (fixed effect) is a significant predictor for the use of the manual negator, taking into account individual variation (random intercept by participant). The significance value was determined at 0.05. Contrasts were defined manually to compare the youngest generation (V) against generation III and generation IV, as well as the two older generations against each other. The model did not provide any evidence that older and younger generations differ significantly in the use of the manual negator. Note, however, that any statistical analysis should be interpreted with caution, given the size of our sample. |
10 | In addition to the descriptive statistics provided here above, we also used a linear mixed effect model in R (R Core Team 2019), using the lme4 package (Bates et al. 2015), to determine whether generation (fixed effect) is a significant predictor for headshake spreading when taking individual variation (random intercept by participant) into account. The significance value was determined at 0.05. Contrasts were defined manually to compare the youngest generation (V) against generation III and generation IV, as well as the two older generations against each other. This model revealed a significant effect for generation V when compared to generations III and IV (z < 0.05). Thus, the headshake spreads significantly more often in productions of the youngest signers than in those of the older signers (Figure 3). Given that signer ID was defined as random intercepts, the observed differences between signers from different generations are unlikely to be caused by idiosyncratic variation. This is corroborated by the relative frequency of scope that is considerably higher for both generation V-signers than for older signers. In addition, we checked for potential effects of gender in both models by defining gender as fixed effect. In both cases, gender does not seem to influence the use of the manual negator and headshake spreading. Note, however, that any statistical analysis should be interpreted with caution, given the size of our sample. |
11 | Similarly, Zeshan (2004, p. 39) reports for her sample of 38 sign languages, that “independent of word order typology, there is a striking preference for post-predicate or clause-final position of negatives across sign languages. […] In some cases, this is the only acceptable position.” Interestingly, Zeshan’s sample includes Auslan, but Johnston’s corpus-based study reveals that the negative particle predominantly precedes the predicate. We thank one of our reviewers for drawing our attention to this fact. |
12 | See also Mesh and Hou (2018) on the use of twist as a negative existential marker in San Juan Quiahije Chatino Sign Language. |
References
- Adone, Dany. 2012. Language Emergence and Creolisation. In Sign Language: An International Handbook. Edited by Roland Pfau, Markus Steinbach and Bencie Woll. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton, pp. 862–89. [Google Scholar]
- Bates, Douglas, Martin Mächler, Ben Bolker, and Steve Walker. 2015. Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models Using Lme4. Journal of Statistical Software 67. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Bayley, Robert, Adam Schembri, and Ceil Lucas. 2015. Variation and Change in Sign Languages. In Sociolinguistics and Deaf Communities. Edited by Adam Schembri and Ceil Lucas. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 61–94. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Brentari, Diane. 2001. Foreign Vocabulary in Sign Languages. A Cross-Linguistic Investigation of Word Formation. Mahwah: Erlbaum. [Google Scholar]
- Cooperrider, Kensy, Natasha Abner, and Susan Goldin-Meadow. 2018. The Palm-up Puzzle: Meanings and Origins of a Widespread Form in Gesture and Sign. Frontiers in Communication 3: 23. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Coppola, Marie, and Ann Senghas. 2010. Deixis in an Emerging Sign Language. In Sign Languages, 1st ed. Edited by Diane Brentari. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 543–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dachkovsky, Svetlana. 2020. From a Demonstrative to a Relative Clause Marker: Grammaticalization of Pointing Signs in Israeli Sign Language. Sign Language & Linguistics 23: 142–70. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dachkovsky, Svetlana, Rose Stamp, and Wendy Sandler. 2018. Constructing Complexity in a Young Sign Language. Frontiers in Psychology 9: 2202. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dahl, Östen. 1979. Typology of Sentence Negation. Linguistics 17: 79–106. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dahl, Östen. 2011. Typology of Negation. In The Expression of Negation. Edited by Laurence R. Horn. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton: pp. 9–38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- de Vos, Connie. 2012. Sign-Spatiality in Kata Kolok: How a Village Sign Language of Bali Inscribes Its Signing Space. Ph.D. thesis, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- de Vos, Connie. 2015. The Kata Kolok Pointing System: Morphemization and Syntactic Integration. Top Cogn. Sci. 7: 150–68. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- de Vos, Connie. 2016. Sampling Shared Sign Languages. Sign Language Studies 16: 204–26. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- de Vos, Connie, and Roland Pfau. 2015. Sign Language Typology: The Contribution of Rural Sign Languages. Annual Review of Linguistics 1: 265–88. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- de Vos, Connie, and Victoria Nyst. 2018. The Time Depth and Typology of Rural Sign Languages. Sign Language Studies 18: 477–87. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dryer, Matthew. 2005. Negative Morphemes. In World Atlas of Language Structures. Edited by Martin Haspelmath, Matthew Dryer, David Gil and Bernard Comrie. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 454–57. [Google Scholar]
- ELAN [Computer Software] (version 5.9). 2020. Nijmegen: Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, The Language Archive. Available online: https://archive.mpi.nl/tla/elan (accessed on 19 December 2021).
- Fischer, Susan. 1975. Influences on Word Order Change in American SIgn Language. In Word Order and Word Order Change. Edited by Charles Li. Austin: University of Texas Press, pp. 1–25. [Google Scholar]
- Fleiss, Joseph L., Bruce Levin, and Myunghee Cho Paik. 2003. Statistical Methods for Rates and Proportions, 3rd ed. Wiley Series in Probability and Statistics; Hoboken: J. Wiley. [Google Scholar]
- Franklin, Amy, Anastasia Giannakidou, and Susan Goldin-Meadow. 2011. Negation, Questions, and Structure Building in a Homesign System. Cognition 118: 398–416. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Fridlund, Alan. 1994. Human Facial Expression. An Evolutionary View. London: Academic Press. [Google Scholar]
- Friedman, Thomas B., Yong Liang, James L. Weber, John T. Hinnant, Thomas D. Barber, Sunaryana Winata, I. Nyoman Arhya, and James H. Asher. 1995. A Gene for Congenital, Recessive Deafness DFNB3 Maps to the Pericentromeric Region of Chromosome 17. Nature Genetics 9: 86–91. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Frishberg, Nancy. 1975. Arbitrariness and Iconicity: Historical Change in American Sign Language. Language 51: 696–719. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gamer, Matthias, Jim Lemon, Ian Fellows, and Puspendra Singh. 2012. Various Coefficients of Inter-Rater Reliability and Agreement. 818 R Package Version 0.84. Available online: https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=irr (accessed on 19 December 2021).
- Geraci, Carlo. 2005. Negation in LIS (Italian Sign Language). In Proceedings of the North East Linguistic Society (NELS 35). Edited by Leah Bateman and Cherlon Ussery. Armherst, MA: GLSA. [Google Scholar]
- Givens, David B. 2002. The Nonverbal Dictionary of Gestures, Signs & Body Language Cues. Washington, DC: Center for Nonverbal Studies Press. [Google Scholar]
- Gökgöz, Kadir. 2011. Negation in Turkish Sign Language: The Syntax of Nonmanual Markers. Sign Language & Linguistics 14: 49–75. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Goldin-Meadow, Susan. 2014. The Impact of Time on Predicate Forms in the Manual Modality: Signers, Homesigners, and Silent Gesturers. Topics in Cognitive Science 7: 169–84. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Hendriks, Bernadet. 2008. Jordanian Sign Language: Aspects of Grammar from a Cross-Linguistic Perspective. LOT 193. Utrecht: LOT. [Google Scholar]
- Jespersen, Otto. 1917. Negation in English and Other Languages. Copenhagen: Høst. [Google Scholar]
- Johnston, Trevor, Jane van Roekel, and Adam Schembri. 2016. On the Conventionalization of Mouth Actions in Australian Sign Language. Language and Speech 59: 3–42. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Johnston, Trevor. 2018. A Corpus-Based Study of the Role of Headshaking in Negation in Auslan (Australian Sign Language): Implications for Signed Language Typology. Linguistic Typology 22: 185–231. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kegl, Judy A., Ann Senghas, and Marie Coppola. 1999. Creation through Contact: Sign Language Emergence and Sign Language Change in Nicaragua. In Language Creation and Language Change: Creolization, Diachrony, and Development. Edited by Michel DeGraff. Cambridge: MIT Press, pp. 179–237. [Google Scholar]
- Kendon, Adam. 2002. Some Uses of the Head Shake. Gesture 2: 147–82. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kettner, Viktoria A., and Jeremy I. M. Carpendale. 2013. Developing Gestures for No and Yes: Head Shaking and Nodding in Infancy. Gesture 13: 193–209. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kirby, Simon, Hannah Cornish, and Kenny Smith. 2008. Cumulative Cultural Evolution in the Laboratory: An Experimental Approach to the Origins of Structure in Human Language. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 105: 10681–86. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Kocab, Annemarie, and Ann Senghas. 2021. Language Emergence: Theoretical and Empirical Perspectives. In The Routledge Handbook of Theoretical and Experimental Sign Language Research. Edited by Josep Quer, Roland Pfau and Annika Herrmann. London: Routledge, pp. 636–63. [Google Scholar]
- König, Alexander. 2011. The Language Archive. Available online: https://archive.mpi.nl/tla/ (accessed on 19 December 2021).
- Kuder, Anna. 2020. Negation Markers in Polish Sign Language. Ph.D. thesis, University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland. (In Polish). [Google Scholar]
- Kwok, Lily, Stephanie Berk, and Diane Lillo-Martin. 2020. Person vs. Locative Agreement: Evidence from Late Learners and Language Emergence. Sign Language & Linguistics 23: 17–37. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Labov, William. 1965. On the Mechanism of Linguistic Change. In Report of the Sixteenth Annual Round Table Meeting on Linguistics and 841 Language Studies. Edited by Charles Kreidler. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, pp. 91–114. [Google Scholar]
- Labov, William. 1994. Principles of Linguistic Change. Language in Society 20. Cambridge: Blackwell. [Google Scholar]
- Lucas, Ceil, Robert Bayley, and Clayton Valli. 2001. Sociolinguistic Variation in American Sign Language. The Sociolinguistics of Deaf Communities 7. Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Lutzenberger, Hannah. Forthcoming. Threat or Natural Fluctuation? Revisiting Language Vitality of Kata Kolok, the Sign Language of a Village in Bali. In State of the Art of Indigenous Languages in Research: A Collection of Selected Research Papers. Paris: UNESCO, in press.
- Marsaja, I. Gede. 2008. Desa Kolok: A Deaf Village and Its Sign Language in Bali, Indonesia. Nijmegen: Ishara Press. [Google Scholar]
- McBurney, Susan. 2012. History of Sign Languages and Sign Language Linguistics. In Sign Language—An International Handbook. Edited by Roland Pfau, Markus Steinbach and Bencie Woll. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton, pp. 909–48. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Meir, Irit, and Wendy Sandler. 2020. Variation and Conventionalization in Young Sign Languages. In Linguistic Contact, Continuity and Change in the Genesis of Modern Hebrew. Edited by Edit Doron, Malka Rappaport Hovav, Yael Reshef and Moshe Taube. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp. 337–63. [Google Scholar]
- Meir, Irit, Mark Aronoff, Carl Börstell, So-One Hwang, Deniz Ilkbasaran, Itamar Kastner, Ryan Lepic, Adi Lifshitz Ben-Basat, Carol Padden, and Wendy Sandler. 2017. The Effect of Being Human and the Basis of Grammatical Word Order: Insights from Novel Communication Systems and Young Sign Languages. Cognition 158: 189–207. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Meir, Irit, Wendy Sandler, Carol Padden, and Mark Aronoff. 2010. Emerging Sign Languages. In The Oxford Handbook of Deaf Studies, Language, and Education. Edited by Marc Marschak and Patricia Elizabeth Spencer. Oxford: Oxford University Press, vol. 2, pp. 267–80. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Meltzoff, Andrew N., and M. Keith Moore. 1977. Imitation of Facial and Manual Gestures by Human Neonates. Science 198: 75–78. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Meltzoff, Andrew N., and M. Keith Moore. 1989. Imitation in Newborn Infants: Exploring the Range of Gestures Imitated and the Underlying Mechanisms. Developmental Psychology 25: 954–62. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Mesh, Kate, and Lynn Hou. 2018. Negation in San Juan Quiahije Chatino Sign Language: The Integration and Adaptation of Conventional Gestures. Gesture 17: 330–74. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Miestamo, Matti. 2005. Standard Negation: The Negation of Declarative Verbal Main Clauses in a Typological Perspective. Empirical Approaches to Language Typology. Berlin: De Gruyter, vol. 31. [Google Scholar]
- Moriarty, Erin. 2020. ‘Sign to Me, Not the Children’: Ideologies of Language Contamination at a Deaf Tourist Site in Bali. Language & Communication 74: 195–203. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Motamedi, Yasamin, Marieke Schouwstra, Kenny Smith, Jennifer Culbertson, and Simon Kirby. 2019. Evolving Artificial Sign Languages in the Lab: From Improvised Gesture to Systematic Sign. Cognition 192: 103964. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Mudd, Katie, Hannah Lutzenberger, Connie de Vos, Paula Fikkert, Onno Crasborn, and Bart de Boer. 2020. The Effect of Sociolinguistic Factors on Variation in the Kata Kolok Lexicon. Asia-Pacific Language Variation 6: 53–88. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Nyst, Victoria. 2012. Shared Sign Languages. In Sign Language: An International Handbook. Edited by Roland Pfau, Markus Steinbach and Bencie Woll. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton, pp. 552–74. [Google Scholar]
- Oomen, Marloes, and Roland Pfau. 2017. Signing not (or Not): A Typological Perspective on Standard Negation in Sign Language of The Netherlands. Linguistic Typology 21: 1–51. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Padden, Carol, Irit Meir, Mark Aronoff, and Wendy Sandler. 2010. The Grammar of Space in Two New Sign Languages. In Sign Languages (Cambridge Language Surveys). Edited by Diane Brentari. New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 573–95. [Google Scholar]
- Palfreyman, Nick. 2019. Variation in Indonesian Sign Language: A Typological and Sociolinguistic Analysis. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Payne, John. 1985. Negation. In Language Typology and Syntactic Description, Vol. 1: Clause Structure. Edited by Timothy Shopen. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 197–242. [Google Scholar]
- Perniss, Pamela, and Ulrike Zeshan. 2008. Possessive and Existential Constructions in Kata Kolok. In Possessive and Existential Constructions in Sign Languages. Edited by Pamela Perniss and Ulrike Zeshan. Sign Language Typology Series, No. 2. Nijmegen: Ishara Press, pp. 125–50. [Google Scholar]
- Pfau, Roland. 2008. The Grammar of Headshake: A Typological Perspective on German Sign Language Negation. Linguistics in Amsterdam 1: 37–74. [Google Scholar]
- Pfau, Roland. 2011. A Point Well Taken. On the Typology and Diachrony of Pointing. In Deaf around the World. The Impact of Language. Edited by Gaurav Mathur and Donna Jo Napoli. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 144–63. [Google Scholar]
- Pfau, Roland. 2015. The Grammaticalization of Headshakes: From Head Movement to Negative Head. In New Directions in Grammaticalization Research. Edited by Andrew D. M. Smith, Graeme Trousdale and Richard Waltereit. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp. 9–50. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Pfau, Roland. 2016. A Featural Approach to Sign Language Negation. In Negation and Polarity: Experimental Perspectives. Edited by Pierre Larrivée and Chungmin Lee. Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 45–74. Available online: http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-17464-8_3 (accessed on 19 December 2021).
- Pfau, Roland, and Josep Quer. 2002. V-to-Neg Raising and Negative Concord in Three Sign Languages. Rivista di Grammatica Generativa 27: 73–86. [Google Scholar]
- Pfau, Roland, and Josep Quer. 2010. Nonmanuals: Their Prosodic and Grammatical Roles. In Sign Languages (Cambridge Language Surveys). Edited by Diane Brentari. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 381–402. [Google Scholar]
- Pfau, Roland, and Markus Steinbach. 2011. Grammaticalization in Sign Languages. In The Oxford Handbook of Grammaticalization. Edited by Bernd Heine and Heiko Narrog. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 1–15. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Puupponen, Anna. 2019. Towards Understanding Nonmanuality: A Semiotic Treatment of Signers’ Head Movements. Glossa: A Journal of General Linguistics 4: 39. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Quer, Josep. 2012. Negation. In Sign Language: An International Handbook. Edited by Roland Pfau, Markus Steinbach and Bencie Woll. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton, pp. 316–39. [Google Scholar]
- R Core Team. 2019. R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. Version 1.0.143. Vienna: R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Available online: https://www.R-project.org/ (accessed on 19 December 2021).
- Rozin, Paul, and April E. Fallon. 1987. A Perspective on Disgust. Psychological Review 94: 23–41. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Rudnev, Pavel, and Anna Kuznetsova. 2021. Linearization Constraints on Sentential Negation in Russian Sign Language Are Prosodic. Sign Language & Linguistics 24: 259–73. [Google Scholar]
- Sandler, Wendy, and Diane Lillo-Martin. 2006. Sign Language and Linguistic Universals. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Sandler, Wendy, Irit Meir, Carol Padden, and Mark Aronoff. 2005. The Emergence of Grammar: Systematic Structure in a New Language. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 102: 2661–65. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Sandler, Wendy, Mark Aronoff, Irit Meir, and Carol Padden. 2011. The Gradual Emergence of Phonological Form in a New Language. Natural Language & Linguistic Theory 29: 503–43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Sandler, Wendy. 1999. The Medium and the Message: The Prosodic Interpretation of Linguistic Content in Israeli Sign Language. Sign Language & Linguistics 2: 187–215. [Google Scholar]
- Sankoff, Gillian. 2006. Age: Apparent Time and Real Time. In Encyclopedia of Language & Linguistics. Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 110–16. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Schembri, Adam, and Trevor Johnston. 2012. Sociolinguistic Aspects of Variation and Change. In Sign Language: An International Handbook. Edited by Roland Pfau, Markus Steinbach and Bencie Woll. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton, pp. 788–816. [Google Scholar]
- Schembri, Adam, David McKee, Rachel McKee, Sara Pivac, Trevor Johnston, and Della Goswell. 2009. Phonological Variation and Change in Australian and New Zealand Sign Languages: The Location Variable. Language Variation and Change 21: 193–231. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Schermer, Trude. 2003. From Variant to Standard: An Overview of the Standardization Process of the Lexicon of Sign Language of The Netherlands over Two Decades. Sign Language Studies 3: 469–86. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Schwager, Waldemar, and Ulrike Zeshan. 2008. Word Classes in Sign Languages: Criteria and Classifications. Studies in Language 32: 509–45. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Senghas, Ann. 2005. Language Emergence: Clues from a New Bedouin Sign. Current Biology 15: R463–65. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Senghas, Ann, and Marie Coppola. 2001. Children Creating Language: How Nicaraguan Sign Language Acquired a Spatial Grammar. Psychological Science 12: 323–28. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Spitz, Rene A. 1957. No and Yes: On the Genesis of Human Communication. New York: International Universities Press. [Google Scholar]
- Stamp, Rose, and Wendy Sandler. 2021. The Emergence of Referential Shift Devices in Three Young Sign Languages. Lingua 257: 103070. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Supalla, Ted. 2001. Making Historical Sign Language Materials Accessible: A Prototype Database of Early ASL. Sign Language & Linguistics 4: 285–97. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- van Boven, Cindy, Marloes Oomen, and Roland Pfau. Forthcoming. Negative Concord in Sign Language of The Netherlands: Journey through a Corpus. In Advances in Sign Language Corpus Linguistics. Edited by Ella Wehrmeyer. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, submitted.
- van der Auwera, Johan. 2011. On the Diachrony of Negation. In The Expression of Negation. Edited by Laurence R. Horn. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton, pp. 73–109. [Google Scholar]
- van Loon, Esther, Roland Pfau, and Markus Steinbach. 2014. The Grammaticalization of Gestures in Sign Languages. In Body—Language—Communication: An International Handbook on Multimodality in Human Interaction. Edited by Cornelia Müller, Alan Cienki, Ellen Fricke, Silva Ladewig, David McNeill and Sedinha Tessendorf. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton, pp. 2133–49. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wilcox, Sherman. 2004. Gesture and Language. Cross-linguistic and Historical Data from Signed Languages. Gesture 4: 43–73. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Winata, Sunaryana, I Nyoman Arhya, Sukarti Moeljopawiro, John T. Hinnant, Yong Liang, Thomas B. Friedman, and James H. Asher. 1995. Congenital Non-Syndromal Autosomal Recessive Deafness in Bengkala, an Isolated Balinese Village. Journal of Medical Genetics 32: 336–43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Wittenburg, Peter, Hennie Brugman, Albert Russel, Alex Klassmann, and Han Sloetjes. 2006. ELAN: A Professional Framework for Multimodality Research. Paper presented at the 5th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC 2006), Genoa, Italy, May 22–28; pp. 1556–59. [Google Scholar]
- Woll, Bencie. 1987. Historical and Comparative Aspects of BSL. In Sign and School: Using Signs in Deaf Children’s Development. Edited by Jim Kyle. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters, pp. 12–34. [Google Scholar]
- Yang, Jun Hui, and Susan D. Fischer. 2002. Expressing Negation in Chinese Sign Language. Sign Language & Linguistics 5: 167–202. [Google Scholar]
- Zeshan, Ulrike. 2004. Hand, Head, and Face: Negative Constructions in Sign Languages. Linguistic Typology 8: 1–58. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zeshan, Ulrike, ed. 2006. Interrogative and Negative Constructions in Sign Languages. Sign Language Typology Series No. 1. Nijmegen: Ishara Press. [Google Scholar]
- Zeshan, Ulrike, and Connie de Vos, eds. 2012. Sign Languages in Village Communities: Anthropological and Linguistic Insights. Sign Language Typology 4. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton, Nijmegen: Ishara Press. [Google Scholar]
- Zeshan, Ulrike, Ernesto Delgado, Hasan Dikyuva, Sibaji Panda, and Connie de Vos. 2013. Cardinal Numerals in Rural Sign Languages: Approaching Cross-Modal Typology. Linguistic Typology 17: 357–96. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
Generation | III | IV | V | |||
Participant | Signer 1 | Signer 2 | Signer 3 | Signer 4 | Signer 5 | Signer 6 |
Gender | male | male | female | female | male | male |
Length of Recording | 61 min | 18 min | 25 min | |||
Dyad | Dyad I | Dyad II | Dyad III |
Manual Particle neg | Non-Manual Element | Total | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Headshake | Tongue Protrusion | |||
Generation III | 56 | 61 | 5 | 69 |
(81.2%) | (88.4%) | (7.2%) | ||
Generation IV | 41 | 35 | 10 | 48 |
(85.4%) | (72.9%) | 20.8%) | ||
Generation V | 42 | 34 | 15 | 45 |
(93.3%) | (75.6%) | (33.3%) | ||
Total | 139 | 130 | 30 | 162 |
(85.8%) | (80.2%) | (18.5%) |
DGS | LSC | ASL | NGT | LIS | TİD | KK | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Country of Usage | Germany | Catalonia | USA | The Netherlands | Italy | Turkey | Bali |
manual dominant? | – | – | – | – | + | + | (+) |
negclause-final? | + | + | +/− | +/− | + | + | + |
hs only on neg? | – | + | + | ? | + | + | + |
hs only on predicate (if neg is absent) | + | + | – | + | – | – | + |
hs spread onto object? | + | + | + | + | – | – | +/− |
hs spread onto subject? | – | – | +/− | – | – | – | +/− |
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Lutzenberger, H.; Pfau, R.; de Vos, C. Emergence or Grammaticalization? The Case of Negation in Kata Kolok. Languages 2022, 7, 23. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages7010023
Lutzenberger H, Pfau R, de Vos C. Emergence or Grammaticalization? The Case of Negation in Kata Kolok. Languages. 2022; 7(1):23. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages7010023
Chicago/Turabian StyleLutzenberger, Hannah, Roland Pfau, and Connie de Vos. 2022. "Emergence or Grammaticalization? The Case of Negation in Kata Kolok" Languages 7, no. 1: 23. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages7010023
APA StyleLutzenberger, H., Pfau, R., & de Vos, C. (2022). Emergence or Grammaticalization? The Case of Negation in Kata Kolok. Languages, 7(1), 23. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages7010023