Taking taxonomy seriously in Linguistics: intelligibility as a criterion of demarcation between languages and dialects.
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In: Lingua, Vol. 256, 103068, 06.2021.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Taking taxonomy seriously in Linguistics: intelligibility as a criterion of demarcation between languages and dialects.
AU - Tamburelli, Marco
PY - 2021/6
Y1 - 2021/6
N2 - In linguistics, a principled definition of what constitutes a ‘language’ in opposition to a ‘dialect’ has been notoriously elusive. The intelligibility criterion, possibly the only criterion that could form the basis of such definition, has often been considered inadequate, leading to the widespread conclusion that languages may not be linguistically definable objects at all (e.g. Chambers and Trudgill, 1998). This paper reconsiders some of the objections typically raised against the intelligibility criterion and argues that one of these objections — namely that intelligibility is a scale to which no meaningfully discernible segmentation may be applied— can be formulated as a testable empirical claim. Three experiments are then presented with the explicit aim to test this claim. Results indicate that, contrary to what has been frequently claimed, the intelligibility scale does allow for potentially meaningful segmentation, providing empirical evidence in favour of adopting intelligibility as an empirically sound criterion of demarcation for the identification of languages and dialects.
AB - In linguistics, a principled definition of what constitutes a ‘language’ in opposition to a ‘dialect’ has been notoriously elusive. The intelligibility criterion, possibly the only criterion that could form the basis of such definition, has often been considered inadequate, leading to the widespread conclusion that languages may not be linguistically definable objects at all (e.g. Chambers and Trudgill, 1998). This paper reconsiders some of the objections typically raised against the intelligibility criterion and argues that one of these objections — namely that intelligibility is a scale to which no meaningfully discernible segmentation may be applied— can be formulated as a testable empirical claim. Three experiments are then presented with the explicit aim to test this claim. Results indicate that, contrary to what has been frequently claimed, the intelligibility scale does allow for potentially meaningful segmentation, providing empirical evidence in favour of adopting intelligibility as an empirically sound criterion of demarcation for the identification of languages and dialects.
KW - Intelligibility criterion
KW - Linguistic taxonomy
KW - Languages
KW - Dialects
U2 - 10.1016/j.lingua.2021.103068
DO - 10.1016/j.lingua.2021.103068
M3 - Article
VL - 256
JO - Lingua
JF - Lingua
SN - 0024-3841
M1 - 103068
ER -