Dialect Recognition via Lexical Processing: Is It a Viable Litmus Test?
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35234Dato
2024-05-21Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Feleke, Tekabe LegesseSammendrag
For decades, linguists have been working to formulate an objective means of distinguishing dialects from languages, but dialect recognition has largely remained a subjective enterprise. Only recently have some studies proposed a processing-based psycholinguistic approach toward dialect recognition. These studies argued that dialect words are stored as a co-dependent representation, not as an independent representation of the words of bilingual speakers. Based on these studies, we investigated the lexical selection and processing mechanisms of bilingual and bidialectal speakers of two understudied languages, Oromo and Amharic, using the picture–word interference paradigm. We found independent lexical representations for both the bilingual and the bidialectal groups, which implies the involvement of the same cognitive mechanisms in both language and dialect processing. Thus, we argue that bidialectal speakers have flexible lexical representation and selection mechanisms that are dependent on the speakers’ previous language experience. Here, we propose a dynamic lexical selection model that accommodates diverse dialect ecologies.
Forlag
MDPISitering
Feleke. Dialect Recognition via Lexical Processing: Is It a Viable Litmus Test?. Languages. 2024;9(6)Metadata
Vis full innførselSamlinger
Copyright 2024 The Author(s)