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Exploring the re-emergence of grammar: The Russian new vocative in an interplay of morphology, phonology and phonetics

Research Project

Project/Area Number 19K21642
Research Category

Grant-in-Aid for Challenging Research (Exploratory)

Allocation TypeMulti-year Fund
Review Section Medium-sized Section 2:Literature, linguistics, and related fields
Research InstitutionNational Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics

Principal Investigator

松井 真雪  大学共同利用機関法人人間文化研究機構国立国語研究所, 理論・対照研究領域, 日本学術振興会特別研究員(PD) (00759011)

Project Period (FY) 2019-06-28 – 2020-03-31
Project Status Discontinued (Fiscal Year 2019)
Budget Amount *help
¥6,240,000 (Direct Cost: ¥4,800,000、Indirect Cost: ¥1,440,000)
Fiscal Year 2020: ¥3,640,000 (Direct Cost: ¥2,800,000、Indirect Cost: ¥840,000)
Fiscal Year 2019: ¥2,600,000 (Direct Cost: ¥2,000,000、Indirect Cost: ¥600,000)
KeywordsNew vocative / Word-final devoicing / Intonation / Corpus / Interface theories / Russian / Phonetics
Outline of Research at the Start

The current project, which consists of a quantitative analysis and theoretical modeling of the Russian new vocative expression, is situated as a cornerstone to transform our current understanding of the vocative typology and evolution as well as the morphology-phonology-phonetics interface theories in linguistics. From a broader perspective, the project can be situated as an interdisciplinary challenge, which aims to cross a border between humanities and other disciplines, especially information science and speech science.

Outline of Annual Research Achievements

Vocative expressions refer to the linguistic means that we use to directly address someone. Through a case study of the Russian “new” vocative expressions, the current project aimed to answer empirical and theoretical questions on vocative expressions in general linguistics, which include in what way the new vocatives are linguistically marked in an interplay of multiple marking strategies (such as morphology and prosody etc.) and how linguistic theories can model those interactions. Three specific research questions of the current study were as follows: (i) Is there a phonetic grammar of the new vocative in present-day Russian?; (ii) How does phonetics interact with morphology and phonology in the context of the new vocative?; (iii) How can the new vocative be modeled through the interplay of morphology, phonology and phonetics?

To address these questions, corpus-based studies were conducted by utilizing the text data in the Russian National Corpus and the audio data in the Multimodal Russian Corpus. The results so far demonstrated that (i) the new vocative is marked not only by morphology, but also by prosody such as the use of distinctive intonation; (ii) the new vocative shows irregularities in the implementation of word-final obstruent devoicing, compared with other word classes. More detailed results will be published as a journal paper in the upcoming years.

Taken together, the current study contributed to advance our understanding of the vocative typology and evolution as well as the morphology-phonology-phonetics interface theories in general linguistics.

Report

(1 results)
  • 2019 Annual Research Report

Research Products

(2 results)

All 2019 Other

All Int'l Joint Research (1 results) Presentation (1 results) (of which Int'l Joint Research: 1 results)

  • [Int'l Joint Research] UiT The Arctic University of Norway(ノルウェー)

    • Related Report
      2019 Annual Research Report
  • [Presentation] Addressing the address function: A corpus study of the Russian new vocative2019

    • Author(s)
      Mayuki Matsui and Tore Nesset
    • Organizer
      The 15th International Cognitive Linguistics Conference, Kwansei Gakuin University (Hyogo, Japan), August 10, 2019, Oral presentation
    • Related Report
      2019 Annual Research Report
    • Int'l Joint Research

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Published: 2019-07-04   Modified: 2021-01-27  

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