Title: Collaborations: As far as different subfields, we
1CollaborationsAs far as different subfields,
were all, Aint no reason we shouldnt work
together
- John Rickford
- Thomas Wasow
- Stanford University
2Unlikely Collaborators
Advisor
Sociolinguistic interviews observations
Methods
Introspection
E-language Shared, social phenomenon
I-language Feature of individual psychology
Focus
3But Friends Neighbors Talk
Johns house
Toms house
4Common Interest Alternations
- Generative grammarians look at what forms may
alternate with others - Variationists look at factors conditioning
alternations - Both concerned with the question of why forms
alternate - But focus on different aspects of the answer
5However
- Focus on different aspects of a question can be
complementary, not competitive - Language is a product of both individual
psychology and social interaction, so both
perspectives contribute - Collaborations across subdisciplines are both
possible and enlightening (cf Sociolinguistics
Phonology plenary by Beth Hume Naomi Nagy
other papers, LSA Chicago, Jan 08)
6Overview
- Summarize the four projects we have collaborated
on so far - Topic-restricting as far as
- Negative inversion in African-American English
- Intensive and Quotative all
- Relativizer omission across dialects
- Draw lessons from each and from them collectively
7The as far as Project
- Syntactic Variation and Change in Progress
Language 1995 (71.1102-31), by Rickford, Wasow,
Mendoza-Denton, Espinoza (1 grad, 1 undergrad
student) - For years, as part of interest in relatively
understudied syntactic variation, John had been
collecting examples like - As far as filling out the details Ø, that isnt a
problem - People think Im constantly in motion, as far as
making films Ø - When is the sentence coda (goes or is concerned)
omitted? - Is omission of coda increasing?
- Tom joined the project after John asked him about
the syntax of the NP after as far as
8What we did
- Collected examples
- First through listening and reading
- Then through corpus searches
- Read usage manuals on this alternation
- Did questionnaire study, getting intuitive
well-formedness ratings (4-point scale) - Coded for factors we thought might matter
- Ran VARBRUL analyses
9Our Findings
- Studying syntactic variation requires methods
other than sociolinguistic interviews
recordings (egs overheard on fly, corpora,
elicited intuitions) - Various factors favor coda omission spoken
modality, younger speaker, female speaker,
syntactically complex NP, prosodically branching
NP, sentence-initial position of as far as - Coda omission has been increasing, both in
frequency and in range of environments where it
occurs (in keeping with Baileys wave model)
10Factors in afa verb absence
11Implications for models of language change
12Historical evidence for wavelike spread
- Env a Sentential NPs, e.g.(61) And I will own to
you, (I am sure it will be safe), that so far as
our living with Mr. Churchill at Enscombe Ø, it
is settled. 1816, Jane Austen, Emma, p. 460 - Env b Prepositional or Conjoined NPs, e.g.(66)
The cabin ... was in perfect condition so far as
frame and covering Ø until 1868. 1939, Henry
Seidel Canby, Thoreau - Env c Simple NPs, e.g. (3) As far as the white
servants Ø, it isn't clear. Renee Blake, 22,
1987
13But We Learned Much More
- A major turning point in Toms career
- Got him started thinking about syntactic
complexity, a topic central to the next decade of
his work - Convinced him of the importance of looking at
usage - Also valuable for John
- first paper whose data did not come from creoles
or AAVE - Contributions to models of lg change
14Syntactic Complexity
- Coda omission sounds better when NP is longer
more complex - As far as Gore Ø, I make no predictions
- As far as the former Vice President who won the
Nobel Prize Ø, I make no predictions - VARBRUL indicates complexity (depth of embedding)
matters more than length - Later found some evidence for same conclusion
regarding heavy NP shift, the dative alternation,
and the verb-particle construction
15Judgment Data
- Questionnaire 20 sentences, rated by 180
speakers on a 4-level scale of acceptability - Results showed clear patterns, but none were
categorical of 80 possible responses (20
sentences x 4 ratings), none occurred fewer than
10 times. - Bottom line well-formedness judgments from a
single speaker are highly suspect - Aside People who said they would never use
coda-less afa sentences were heard doing so
16Corpus Data
- Reviewer questioned the high rate of coda
omission we reported, suggesting sentences w/o
coda might be more noticeable - Searched a small portion of the Switchboard
corpus and found a much higher level of coda
omission there - Convinced us of the value of electronic corpora
- Corpus studies continue to play a big role in our
research
17AAVE Negative Inversion
- An Optimality Theoretic Approach to Variation in
Negative Inversion in AAVE Natural Language and
Linguistic Theory 1996 (14.3591-627). Sells,
Rickford, Wasow - Dealt with examples like
- Cant nobody beat em
- Aint nothin went down
- Goals
- Improve on old analysis of Labovs, which posited
two distinct analyses - Explain why this inversion is limited to
negatives - Method Elicited judgments from native AAVE
speakers
18Origins of This Collaboration
- Tom got interested in AAVE by student in intro
syntax course (Renée Blake), who noted
divergences in judgments - Formed reading group on AAVE syntax with John,
Peter Sells, Arnold Zwicky, and (later) Lisa
Green, who visited as a postdoc - Wont go into details about our analysis
19AAVE as a Real Language
- Linguists claimed for decades that AAVE is not
just bad English, sloppy talk, etc. - But most previous work focused on social factors
surrounding AAVE and its relationship to standard
American English - This paper was a formal syntax paper, whose
object language happened to be AAVE - Appeared the same year as the Ebonics controversy
in Oakland
20Syntactic Variation and OT
- This paper was also an early application of
Optimality Theory to syntax - Because the phenomenon exhibits variation, we
proposed that individual speakers may allow
multiple constraint rankings - This idea was being explored in morphology at the
same time by our then-student, Arto Anttila - Anttila has since applied it very insightfully to
syntactic variation, as well
21The ALL Project
- Intensive and Quotative ALL Something Old,
Something New American Speech, 2007. Rickford,
Buchstaller, Wasow, Zwicky. - The Sociolinguistics of a Short-Lived
Innovation Tracing the development of quotative
all across real and apparent time under
revision. Buchstaller, Rickford, Traugott, Wasow,
Zwicky. - The lady was al demonyak historical aspects of
Adverb all English Language Linguistics.
Buchstaller Traugott. - Lots of other collaborators In addition to
co-authors, students Zoe Bogart, Tracy Conner,
Rowyn McDonald, Nick Romero, Laura Whitton,
Kathryn Campbell-Kibler, Lauren Hall-Lew, Laura
Staum and others
22The Phenomena
She was all mad at me.
23Origins of the ALL Project Johns Dream
- Email sent 3/18/04, to full departmental mailing
list - OK, this isn't Black History month, and this
is not about MLK Jr.'s famous speech. - It IS about a dream I had a few hours ago
that we (Stanford Linguistics faculty and
students) were working on a common linguistic
project that drew on the expertise and experience
of our respective subfields, showcasing the value
of collective effort on a scale unprecedented in
linguistics, and highlighting what is distinctive
about linguistics at Stanford. I'm here at 5 am
trying to see if there's any hope of making the
dream a reality. We could devote a small
portion of our time and say, one faculty meeting
or colloquium a month to the collective
enterprise, building up a pool of data and
readings ..., and resulting in conference
presentations and publications under a common
name, like the "Stanford Linguistics Collective"
24Data for ALL Study
- 1990/94 recordings of native California
adolescents young adults collected by Ann
Wimmer (Stanford undergrad senior thesis)
Carmen Fought (Pitzer College, LA area) - New 2005 recordings of high school college
students from Palo Alto, Stanford, San
Francisco - Multi-source corpus--incl. examples from
conversation culled from publications (Waksler,
American Speech 2001), web pages, TV series
(Buffy the Vampire Slayer) movies (Clueless).
Lots of all tokens (597 intensifiers, 253
quotatives), but not accountable like recorded
corpora. - Google Newsgroups Corpus, 1981-2005. Billions of
words, including at least 354 examples of
quotative all.
25Results Intensive ALL
- Intensive all is old, examples going back to 11th
13th c. - But extension to full tensed verbs is new
she all walks in ...
I all screamed... - In 2005 recordings, most common with
adjectives (all spastic), PPs
(all in bed), Verbing (all laughing) - As a booster, a degree modifier that intensifies
the property of its head, intensive all (7 in
our corpus) is not as frequent as really
(52), so (19), and very (9), but it is more
frequent than totally (3), and is popular with
adjectives denoting physical
property (all shiny), age, color, speed.
26Quotatives Im Like Yeah, But Shes All No
The Mr. T Experience
Boy meets girl, girl teases boy, boy looks for
something to destroy. Hes into her, shes onto
him, and thats the way its always been. Shell
be with you if you want her to, unless she finds
out that you do. Then somehow she wont want to
be, it turns around so suddenly. And Im like
yeah, but shes all no, and Im all come on baby,
lets go, and shes like I dont think so, and
Im going... The search for love and happiness
turns out to be a game of chess. You cant move
or you flip the board, and youre lying in pieces
on the floor. Im like um, and shes all hey,
and Im all come on baby, lets play, and shes
like thats okay and Im going... Every day I
just want to say I love her madly, but I do it so
badly, that when I do, I can't get through. If
she even listens, shes way off in the distance.
Success in these relationships rests more or less
on gamesmanship, and these are ships that I cant
board, or keep in order or afford. Im like
yeah, but shes all no, and Im all come on baby,
lets go, and shes like I dont think so, and Im
going. Im going. Im going..
27Results Quotative ALL
- Its new 1st noted 1982. (Switchboard, 1988-92
Santa Barbara Corpus of Spoken American English
I each has only 1 example) - In 1990/94 corpus, all is primary quotative
introducer (all used 46, like 17, unframed 16,
say 11, Other 8, go 2) VARBRUL analysis
shows primary favoring factor is Present tense,
then Quoted Speech (vs. Thought), then
Perseverance (quotative all in 5 preceding lines) - In 2005 corpus, all much less frequent (4) as
quotative introducer, overtaken by like (69),
all like has emerged. VARBRUL shows tense not
significant, but Speech still favors,
perseverance disfavors all. - Google newsgroups data also suggest quotative all
peaked in 1999, then declined steeply.
28Lessons from the ALL Project
- Even at its peak, quotative all had somewhat
different usage patterns from other quotatives - Linguistic innovations can be short-lived
- Mix of sociolinguistic interviews and corpus work
can be productive - Large, heterogeneous groups of linguists are
capable of working together productively
29 Relativizer Omission
- Ongoing work -- no joint publications yet, but
separate conference presentations (Tom et al
since 2004, John Laura 2008) in press
articles - First time we both worked on the same alternation
separately before collaborating - Toms work mostly with Florian Jaeger, plus
sometimes Roger Levy or David Orr - Johns work w grad student Laura Smith w
undergrads Pat Callier, Cole Paulson, Doug Kenter
plus consultant Bob Bayley (UCD)
30The Phenomenon
- Alternation in relative clauses
- The last movie which/that I saw was Ironman
- The last movie Ø I saw was Ironman
- Both interested in factors influencing omission
- Toms work largely on the Switchboard corpus
- John studying AAVE and Appalachian English and
Caribbean English creoles (in Jamaica, Guyana,
Barbados)
31Toms Issues
- What can relativizer omission tell us about
syntactic processing? - How do grammar and processing influence one
another? - Proposal from Wasow, Jaeger, Orr (in press)
The more predictable the occurrence of a
non-subject relative clause is, the less likely
it is to have a relativizer - If this is due to processing, it should be the
same across dialects
32Johns Issues
- Does relativizer choice (including omission)
pattern alike in AAVE, Appalachian (White
vernacular) and Caribbean creoles? - How do relativizer patterns in these lang-uages
compare to those in colloquial and standard
English? (NO quan. data avail.) - What, if anything, can be concluded about the
origins of AAVE from relativizer patterns
(cf.Tottie Harvie in Poplack, ed., 2000)? - How test predictability hypothesis without
tagged/parsed computer corpora?
33Projects Mutually Reinforcing
- Predictability hypothesis needs to be tested on
wider range of data - Processing explanations of relativizer patterns
undermine historical arguments based on them. - AAVE, Appalachian creoles among dialects that
allow relativizer omission more freely in subject
RCs - He the man Ø got all the records
- A yuh Ø mek dem bad (Lionheart Gal, p. 8,Jca)
- This is another place to test both the
predictability hypothesis and similarities across
dialects - So are it-clefts Its in the bed (that) they
hid the gun.
34Take Away Lessons
- Dont compartmentalize! Lx today requiring more
breadth than before, combining observations
experiments (Campbell-Kibler), diff subfields
(phonetics/socio) fields (Psych, Sociol) - Language is a multi-faceted phenomenon
- Has an intricate internal structure, represented
in the minds of speakers, influenced by human
information processing mechanisms - Is a powerful social tool, shaping and shaped by
our interactions - These facets are not independent
- We learn more about language when we attend to
both - Computational tools changing both
sociolinguistics and syntax in ways that bring
their methods and results closer together - Larger theorizing model building? (What we
havent yet done)
35Thanks to
- NSF grant 1101381-100-QAOLE (Rickford, PI)
- Grants from Stanford Humanities Lab the
Vice-Provost for Undergraduate Education - Too many individuals to fit on this slide,
notably our other collaborators students - and Beth Hume and the other meeting organizers
for inviting (and helping) us. - Slides available soon at http//www.stanford.edu/
wasow/wasow.html