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In diesem Beitrag wird gezeigt, dass das Wort Volk seit einigen Jahren ein Schlüsselwort politischer Diskurse in Deutschland darstellt. Dies bedeutet im Sinne Wolf-Andreas LIEBERTs (2003) nicht nur, dass es von unterschiedlichen gesellschaftlichen Akteuren verwendet wird, um gegensätzliche Ideale und Antworten auf die Frage nach der eigenen individuellen und kollektiven Identität zu formulieren, sondern auch selbst zum Gegenstand von Kontroversen und damit diskursbestimmend wird. Dass diese jüngere Entwicklung eine besondere ist, machen Analysen deutlich, die die Verwendung des Wortes in unterschiedlichen und hinsichtlich nationaler und sozialer Identitäten dynamischen Phasen der deutschen Geschichte in den Blick nehmen.
Im Zeitalter der Globalisierung ist die Migration zu einem Ereignis geworden, das immer mehr Menschen betrifft. So machen sich einige auf der Suche nach besseren Lebensbedingungen und aus Gründen der Selbstverwirklichung freiwillig auf den Weg in ein neues Land, während andere durch Krieg oder Armut zum Verlassen ihrer Heimat gezwungen werden. Im Zielland treffen die Migranten notwendigerweise auf andere Menschen, mit denen sie sich austauschen, mit denen sie kommunizieren müssen – möglichst im Medium der Sprache. In den meisten Fällen ist die Sprache des Ziellandes jedoch eine andere als die des Herkunftslandes, so dass eine längerfristige Migration häufig, allerdings in ganz unterschiedlichem Ausmaße, zur Mehrsprachigkeit der Migranten führt.
The aim of this paper is to analyse the development of narrative macrostructure and the impact of socio-economic status (SES) and home literacy environment (HLE) on the narrative macrostructure of monolingual preschoolers in Germany when retelling and telling a story. The analysis of narrative macrostructure includes three components: story structure, story complexity, and story comprehension. Oral narratives were elicited via Multilingual Assessment Instrument for Narratives (LITMUS-MAIN). 198 monolingual children between age 4;6 and 5;11 participated (M=63 months, SD=5 months). The comparison of narrative macrostructure in three age groups (4;6 to 4;11 years, 5;0 to 5;5 years, 5;6 to 5;11 years) illustrate significant age effects in story structure, story complexity and story comprehension skills. There were weak significant positive correlations of some of these skills with aspects of socio-economic status and home literacy environment, for example between story comprehension skills and the educational background, the frequency and duration of the child’s exposure to books and the number of books in the household.
This thesis investigates the acquisition of compositional and lexical semantic properties of adjectives in German-speaking children between the age of two and five years.
According to formal semantic approaches, there are intersective and non-intersective adjectives, subsective and non-subsective adjectives as well as gradable and non-gradable adjectives. These properties concern the compositional mechanisms involved in nominal modification, i.e., the combination of adjectives and nouns. In addition, adjectives differ regarding lexical semantic properties that contribute to the adjectives' meaning. Differences in the adjectives' scale structure have led to the theoretical assumption that gradable adjectives should be distinguished into relative and absolute gradable adjectives. In addition, meaning components such as multidimensionality or subjectivity have led to the distinction between dimensional and evaluative gradable adjectives. These properties have been mostly investigated independently of each other in both theory and acquisition research. I suggest a classification system for adjectives that combines different semantic properties. This system results in six adjective classes constituting a Semantic Complexity Hierarchy. Assuming that these adjective classes differ in semantic complexity, I propose an operationalization of semantic complexity that takes into account the adjectives' length of description, their type complexity, and lexical properties that contribute to the adjectives' meaning.
Regarding the question of how monolingual German-speaking children acquire the semantics of adjectives, I hypothesize that the order of acquisition of adjectives is determined by their semantic complexity. This hypothesis is tested in a spontaneous speech study and a comprehension experiment.
The spontaneous speech study is a longitudinal investigation of the production of adjectives from 2;00 to 2;11 years based on transcripts from a dense data corpus. The results provide evidence that the mean age of acquisition for the adjective classes in the Semantic Complexity Hierarchy follows the order predicted by semantic complexity. The same order was observed for the age at which the number of types for each class increased most. A preliminary analysis of the input indicates that the frequency of parental adjective use is related to the order of acquisition, but it is unlikely that frequency determines the order completely.
The comprehension experiment focuses on two specific adjective classes. I examine children's and adults' interpretation of relative (big, small) and absolute (clean, dirty) gradable dimensional adjectives with a picture-choice task. These two classes are of the same semantic complexity because they are both gradable, but they have different scale structures. As a result, they must be interpreted differently due to lexical semantic properties. I investigate whether children calculate different standards of comparison for relative and absolute gradable adjectives and whether they distinguish between relative and absolute gradable adjectives regarding the relevance of the explicit comparison class. The results indicate that as of age 3, children distinguish between relative and absolute gradable adjectives with regard to the standard of comparison. However, with respect to the relevance of the comparison class, for 3-year-old children, unlike for 4- and 5-year-olds, changes in the noun, i.e., in the explicit comparison class, led to non-adult-like responses regarding both relative and absolute gradable adjectives.
On the basis of the empirical findings, I propose an acquisition path stating that children enter the acquisition process with inherent linguistic knowledge, the Semantic Complexity Hierarchy, and cognitive abilities to categorize their environment. I suggest that initially, children apply the least complex interpretation available in the Semantic Complexity Hierarchy to all adjectives: all adjectives are interpreted as properties of individuals that are not gradable. To access other levels of the Semantic Complexity Hierarchy and to establish more complex adjective classes, positive evidence from the input and conceptual properties of adjectives, e.g., COLOR, MENTAL STATE, PHYSICAL PROPERTY etc., can operate as triggers.
In this paper I will present some empirical studies concerning a linguistic construction called binomials, e.g. auf und ab (‚up and down‘). Binomials consist of two coordinated elements in a fixed order ‚A and B‘, whereas empirically the reversed order ‚B and A‘ is rarely found and, asked for acceptability judgements, native speakers tend to reject it. In two corpus studies hypotheses on phonological principles responsible for the ordering of the constituents are tested. Furthermore I present a pseudoword experiment with German native speakers and Russian and Turkish learners of German as a second language. Results are discussed in the framework of optimality theory.
This study examines articulatory and acoustic inter-speaker variability in the production of the German vowels /i/, /u/ and /a/. Our subjects are 3 monozygotic twin pairs (2 female and 1 male pair) and 2 dizygotic female twin pairs. All of them were born, raised and are still living in Berlin and see their twin brother or sister regularly. We assume that monozygotic twins that are genetically identical and share the same physiology should be more similar in their articulation than dizygotic twins but that the shared time and social environment of twins, regardless of their genetic similarity, also plays a crucial role in the acoustic similarity of twins. Articulatory measurements were made with EMA (Electromagnetic Articulography) and the target positions of the produced vowels were analyzed. Additionally, the formants F1-F4 of each vowel were measured and compared within the twin pairs. Our data seems to point out the importance of a shared environment and the strong influence of learning over the anatomical identity of the monozygotic twins regarding the production of vowels. But, additional results suggest (1) the impact of physiology on the production of a vowel following a velar consonant and (2) the interaction of physiology and stress in inter-speaker variability.
In this paper we will develop a formal conceptual model of how the path in a motion situation interacts with the semantic analysis of so called 'motion shape verbs' like 'wackeln' ('wobble'), a subclass of the so called 'manner of motion verbs'. Central to this model will be the distinction between two concepts of motion: translational motion and nontranslational motion, which has no inherent translational component but puts emphasis on describing specific Motion Shape Patterns. We will define and algorithmically describe a theory of Path Shape Decomposition that aims at algorithmically deriving the translational vs. nontranslational distinction from the shape of the path. To account for object internal motion, we additionally introduce Bounding Box encapsulation, which yields a topological division of inner and outer movement. Finally we demonstrate how the outcome of such a technical decomposition can be used in modelling a Path Superimposition scenario like 'Peter wackelt über die Straße'.
Zur Versprachlichung des Raums in Bildergeschichten deutschsprachiger Vor- und Grundschulkinder
(2002)
Gegenstand der vorliegenden Arbeit ist die Versprachlichung des Raums in Bildergeschichten deutschsprachiger Vor- und Grundschulkinder. Methodisch fügt sich die Untersuchung in Arbeiten zur Entwicklung der narrativen Kompetenz des Kindes anhand von Bildergeschichten ein, wie sie in neuerer Zeit […] durchgeführt wurden (s. vor allem Berman & Slobin 1994). Hinsichtlich der allgemein-sprachwissenschaftlichen Analyse der Versprachlichung des Raums ist die Arbeit vor allem den typologischen Studien von L. Talmy (1985, 1991) verpflichtet. […] Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit ist es, die Rolle der Versprachlichung räumlicher Beziehungen unter zwei Aspekten zu untersuchen: hinsichtlich der Erstellung kohärenten narrativen Diskurses und hinsichtlich der sprachlichen Mittel, mittels derer die Kinder auf statische und dynamische räumliche Beziehungen referieren. Entsprechend der Dreiteilung der Ich-Jetzt-Hier-Origo stellen räumliche Beziehungen neben der Referenz auf Personen und zeitliche Beziehungen einen der drei Bereiche dar, in denen sich textuelle Kohärenz manifestiert. Bei der Versprachlichung des Raums geht es einerseits um Einführung, Beibehaltung und Verschiebung narrativer Orte und andererseits um statische räumliche Befindlichkeiten gegenüber dynamischen räumlichen Ereignissen. […] Die Arbeit gliedert sich in einen theoretischen und einen empirischen Hauptteil.
Ziel des Teilprojekts ist die thematische Erschließung der Korpora, um sowohl themenspezifische virtuelle Subkorpora zusammenstellen zu können als auch aufgrund der Analyse sachgebietsbezogener Häufigkeitsverteilungen z.B. Lesarten disambiguieren zu können. Ausgangspunkt ist die Erstellung einer Taxonomie von Sachgebietsthemen. Dies erfolgt in einem semiautomatischen Verfahren, welches die Anwendung von Textmining (Dokumentclustering) und die manuelle Zuordnung von Clustern in eine externen Ontologie beinhaltet. Es wird argumentiert, dass die so gewonnene Taxonomie sowohl intuitiver als auch objektiver ist als bestehende, rein manuelle Ansätze. Sie eignet sich zudem gleichermaßen für manuelle als auch für maschinelle Klassifikation. Für letzteres wird der Naive Bayes'sche Textklassifikator motiviert und für ein klassifiziertes Korpus von knapp zwei Milliarden Wörtern evaluiert.