Die aard van dialektiese verskeidenheid in afrikaans
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University of Pretoria
Abstract
The claim has oftell been made that Afrikaans has no dialects. The
general implication is that the range of variation
of language usage in Afrikaans is relatively limited. This study
does not deal with the range of dialectal variation but is concerned
solely with the nature of the variations.
The study is based on a corpus in which the material has
been derived from the following sources:
the Afrikaanse Taalatlas;
tape recordings and unpublished material collected
fer the ATA;
unpublished naterial collected in the early forties
by Prof. SA Louw through questionnaires;
several hundred letters from listeners to a language
programme organised on the SABC.
Chapter I is a statement on principles and methodology.
The concepts, SYSTEM, DIASYSTEM, AB (Algemeen Beskaafd)
and DIALECT are discussed in terms of Weinreich's model for dialect
description.
The problem of criteria for distinguishing between
LANGUAGE, AB and DIALECT is then examined.
It is assumed that variations in language usage can be
discussed without reference to a geographical context by making
use of the all-or-nothing principle regarding the identity of
systems.
The assumption is made that polyglots participate in
different language communities. In terms of this, certain distinctinns are drawn which restrict our interpretation nf tie
concept "Afrikaans".
In CHAPTER II the status of Afrikaans as a language is
discussed. The rise of AB-Afrikaans is discussed in its relation
to AB-Dutch and to English. It is claimed that there
is no strong socio-cultural pressure from an AB norm in Afrikaans
on geographically restricted forms of language usage. The
norm of AB-Afrikaans is rather a norm of generality.
The problem of cartographic patterns in the Afrikaans
language region is then discussed. Language usage variations
in Afrikaans criss-cross geographically to a tremendous extent.
An arbitrary and technical classification based on the principle
of generality or frequency of occnrrence is applied to the AT.A.
On this basis it is possible to distinguish certain language
landscapes.
Finally, the nature of these isoglosses in language landscapes
is disr.ussed.
CHAPTER III is devoted to a discussion of dialectal variations
in phonology.
Ls we have no proof of dialectal variations in the phoneme
inventory, only variations in the phonemic content cf word form
variations are noted. Phonemic alternants are the most frequent
phenomena at this level. Indiviiual vowels form especially large
paradigmatic series.
Sub-phonemic variations are discussed by noting, among
other things, the correspondence with optional phonic variations
in one dialect. In CHAPTER IV word form variations are treated on the
morphological level. horphological variations occur in various
lexical items although without anywhere forming a fully structured.
category. In addition, the question of morphological compaction
and status variations between components in separate dialect
systems is discussed.
CHAPTER V surveys syntactic 9 logotactic and idiomatic variations.
Syntactic variations are limited exclusively to isolated
instances and individual minor categories, particularly in
the verbal groupe
Logotactic and idiomatic variations are non-grammatical and
thus of necessity restricted to cases which do not occur in series.
CHAPTER VI discusses variations within the lexicon. The
most striking and extensive variations in Lfrikaans are formed at
the lexical level.
In this chapter attention is given to words with a geographically
restricted usage, older lexical strata, semantic and formal
variations. The pattern of loanword landscapes and the syntactic
transparency of composita are briefly considered.
Description
Thesis (DLitt)--University of Pretoria, 1968.
Keywords
UCTD
Sustainable Development Goals
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