Pronoun omission in high-contact varieties of English. Complexity versus efficiency
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John Benjamins
Abstract
This paper considers pronoun omission in different varieties of English. It argues
that omitted pronouns simplify structures if their referents are accessible in
discourse, which explains the greater frequency of this grammatical feature in
high-contact varieties of English, spoken in speech communities with a history
of high numbers of second-language users. A corpus study of two high-contact
varieties, Indian English and Singapore English, and a low-contact one, British
English, is conducted in order to examine the distribution of omitted and overt
pronouns. As expected, pronoun omission is more frequent in the high-contact
varieties than in British English. Moreover, pronouns are omitted almost exclusively
when they have highly accessible referents as antecedents, which is not a
conventionalized feature of the grammars of Indian or Singapore English, where
overt pronouns are the default choice when referring to antecedents
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Tamaredo, I. (2018). Pronoun omission in high-contact varieties of English. English World-Wide, 39(1), 85-110. doi: 10.1075/eww.00004.tam
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https://doi.org/10.1075/eww.00004.tamSponsors
For generous financial support, I am grateful to the European Regional Development Fund and
the following institutions: Regional Government of Galicia (Directorate General for Scientific
and Technological Promotion, grant GPC 2014/004); Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (grants FFI2014-51873-REDT, FFI2014-52188-P and BES-2015-071233)
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© John Benjamins Publishing Company This is an open access article under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license
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