Producing composite codeswitching: The role of the modularity of language production
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
International Journal of Bilingualism
Abstract
The basic characteristic of composite codeswitching is that the languages involved share responsibility
for framing bilingual constituents. This paper points to evidence of this characteristic in the nature of
morpheme distribution in mixed possessive constructions in Ewe–English codeswitching, spoken in
Ghana. An Ewe semantic distinction between two types of possessive constructions is consistently
neutralized when English possessum nominals are used instead of their Ewe counterparts, and
the paper demonstrates that the neutralization of this distinction results from direct mapping of
English-origin grammatical information about English nominals onto Ewe grammar. It explains that
this mapping of information from one grammar onto another one is characteristic of composite
codeswitching and that it is facilitated by the fact that language production is modular in the sense
of Levelt ((1989). Speaking: From intention to articulation. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press) and Myers-
Scotton ((1993). Duelling languages: Grammatical structure in codeswitching. Oxford, UK: Clarendon
Press; (2002). Contact linguistics: Bilingual encounters and grammatical outcomes. Oxford, UK: Oxford
University Press).