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11.
Spatial terms and conditions of Sign Language Agreement
Matic Pavlič, 2018, objavljeni povzetek znanstvenega prispevka na konferenci

Ključne besede: Slovenian Sign Language, agreement, referential location, transitives, ditransitives
Objavljeno v RUNG: 17.04.2018; Ogledov: 3819; Prenosov: 160
.pdf Celotno besedilo (236,55 KB)

12.
The non-dominant hand perseveration and movement in SZJ locative constructions
Matic Pavlič, 2018, objavljeni znanstveni prispevek na konferenci

Opis: In sign languages, signers habitually encode the relations between locative arguments with a complex predicate consisting of several independent morphemes, as shown by Pfau and Aboh (2012) for Sign Language of the Netherlands. In this study, I examine perseverations and movements of the non-dominant hand (H2) in Slovenian Sign Language (SZJ) locative constructions. In SZJ, the H2may be persevered after producing the two-handed Ground in locative constructions. This is shown by the data collected from seven first language SZJ informants, using a Picture Description Task. The referential location as well as the orientation and the handshape of this perseveration may change at the sign-boundary when the one-handed Figure has just been articulated and the one-handed predicate is about to be signed. Before this sign-boundary, the handshape of the persevered H2 refers to the Ground – and is therefore a Ground classifier. After that boundary, the handshape of the persevered H2 refers to the part of the Ground that is relevant for localizing the Figure – and is therefore an axial part classifier that projects aMeasure Phrase.
Ključne besede: locative construction, non-dominant hand perseveration, measure phrase, Slovenian Sign Language
Objavljeno v RUNG: 20.03.2018; Ogledov: 3875; Prenosov: 171
.pdf Celotno besedilo (1,37 MB)

13.
Children's early bilingualism and musical training influence prosodic discrimination of sentences in an unknown language
Arthur Stepanov, Matic Pavlič, Penka Stateva, Anne Reboul, 2018, izvirni znanstveni članek

Opis: This study investigated whether early bilingualism and early musical training positively influence the ability to discriminate between prosodic patterns corresponding to different syntactic structures in otherwise phonetically identical sentences in an unknown language. In a same-different discrimination task, participants (N = 108) divided into four groups (monolingual non-musicians, monolingual musicians, bilingual non-musicians, and bilingual musicians) listened to pairs of short sentences in a language unknown to them (French). In discriminating phonetically identical but prosodically different sentences, musicians, bilinguals, and bilingual musicians outperformed the controls. However, there was no interaction between bilingualism and musical training to suggest an additive effect. These results underscore the significant role of both types of experience in enhancing the listeners' sensitivity to prosodic information.
Ključne besede: prosody, bilingualism, same-different task, French, musical training, acoustics, brain
Objavljeno v RUNG: 10.01.2018; Ogledov: 3911; Prenosov: 0
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14.
The effect of a classifier predicate on the word order in an SVO sign language
Matic Pavlič, 2016, objavljeni povzetek znanstvenega prispevka na konferenci

Opis: The effect of a classifier predicate on the word order in transitive sentences is a well known phenomenon in sign language (SL) linguistics, while Sze (2003) is the only author noticing it in ditransitive sentences. In this study, I examine the word order of transitive and ditransitive sentences with a classifier predicate and provide a part-of-the-speech analysis of this predicate in Slovenian Sign Language (SZJ).
Ključne besede: Slovenian Sign Lanugage, classifier predicate, word order, transitives, ditransitives
Objavljeno v RUNG: 10.11.2017; Ogledov: 4089; Prenosov: 0
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15.
Classifier predicate as a small clause in Slovenian Sign Language
Matic Pavlič, 2017, objavljeni povzetek znanstvenega prispevka na konferenci

Opis: In Slovenian Sign Language (SZJ), classifier predicate cannot be negated and thus it does not qualify as the head of a verb phrase. Such a conclusion does not rule out the possibility that SZJ classifier predicate projects a reduced clausal structure. I analyze these SZJ classifier predicates as non-verbal predicates that form a small-clause structure assuming that classifier small clause is selected by an overt (HAVE) or a covert verbal head. This proposal explains the complexity of classifier predicates. Being a non-verbal projection, classifier predicate fails to move with a verbal V-to-T movement and stays in situ. For SVO languages such as SZJ, this analysis correctly predicts the change from the basic SVO to the non-basic SOV for transitive classifier predicates and from the basic SVOdOi to the non-basic SOdVOi for ditransitive classifier predicates.
Ključne besede: Slovenian Sign Language, classifier predicate, small clause, word order
Objavljeno v RUNG: 10.11.2017; Ogledov: 4376; Prenosov: 0
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16.
Kako reči/pokazati "ne" v slovenskem znakovnem jeziku : Lingvistični krožek
Matic Pavlič, prispevek na konferenci brez natisa

Ključne besede: Slovenski znakovni jezika, zanikanje, besedni red, prozodija, mimika
Objavljeno v RUNG: 07.11.2017; Ogledov: 3979; Prenosov: 0
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17.
The dominant and non-dominant hand movement in Slovenian Sign Language locative constructions
Matic Pavlič, 2017, objavljeni povzetek znanstvenega prispevka na konferenci

Opis: In sign languages, signers habitually encode the relations between locative arguments with a complex predicate consisting of several independent morphemes, as shown by Pfau and Aboh (2012) for Sign Language of the Netherlands. In this study, I discuss the direction and composition of locative movement in Slovenian Sign Language (SZJ), distinguishing it from the movement of non-locative predicates in this language. This distinction gives support to the original distinction between agreeing and spatially agreeing predicates that was first suggested for American Sign Language (ASL) by Padden (1983).
Ključne besede: Slovenian Sign Language, locative construction, prepositional phrase, hand movement, non-dominant hand perseveration
Objavljeno v RUNG: 07.11.2017; Ogledov: 3980; Prenosov: 0
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18.
The parameters that set word order in Slovenian Sign Language
Matic Pavlič, 2015, objavljeni povzetek znanstvenega prispevka na konferenci

Opis: The field of word order (WO) research in oral languages was opened with Greenberg (1963), who discovered that possible WOs are not evenly distributed in his sample of 30 languages. Linguists have ever since struggled to find out how do prevalent WOs emerge in the human brain (for the overview see Kemmerer 2012), how they are derived (for the overview see Dryer and Haspelmath 2013) and acquired (for the overview see Franck et al. 2013). According to Generative Grammar, basic WO is an output of the Head parameter (Chomsky 1981) and the Binarity principle (Kayne 1984). It reflects most transparently in the pragmatically unmarked surface order of subject, object and verb. The research on WO in sign languages (for the overview see Leeson and Saeed 2012) focused on exceptions, that may be triggered by modality specific factors: spacial verb-argument agreement, semantic reversibility and iconicity. In this paper I provide the first description of Slovenian Sign Language (SZJ) arguing that its basic WO is SVO. I examine overt agreement and semantic reversibility and conclude, that these phenomena do not affect WO in SZJ. In the second part, I discuss non-basic SZJ WO that appears in role-shifting and classffer constructions due to the presence of verb-incorporated object classffers. All examples are from SZJ, elicited from L1 SZJ signers by Picture Description Task (see Volterra et al. 1984).
Ključne besede: Word order, Slovenian Sign Language, classifier predicate
Objavljeno v RUNG: 07.11.2017; Ogledov: 4718; Prenosov: 0
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19.
O dvopredmetni dajalniški strukturi v slovenskem znakovnem jeziku
Matic Pavlič, 2015, objavljeni znanstveni prispevek na konferenci

Opis: Glagoli slovenskega znakovnega jezika, ki oddajo tri udeleženske vloge, lahko izrazijo ujemanje le z dvema argumentoma. Ujemalna shema teh glagolov se razlikuje glede na to, ali je nepremi predmet obvezen ali neobvezen del njihove argumentne strukture. Gibanje glagolov z obveznim nepremim predmetom se začenja v kretalnem prostoru osebka in končuje v kretalnem prostoru nepremega predmeta – s čimer je izraženo ujemanje s tema dvema argumentoma. Gibanje glagolov z neobveznim nepremim predmetom se začne v kretalnem prostoru osebka in konča v kretalnem prostoru premega predmeta – s čimer je izraženo ujemanje, ki je sicer značilno za prehodne glagole.
Ključne besede: dvopredmetnost, slovenski znakovni jezik, ujemanje, argumentna struktura
Objavljeno v RUNG: 07.11.2017; Ogledov: 3783; Prenosov: 220
.pdf Celotno besedilo (1,01 MB)

20.
Sharing space is Slovenian Sign Language (SZJ)
Matic Pavlič, 2015, objavljeni znanstveni prispevek na konferenci

Opis: In this paper my aim is to introduce Slovenian Sign Language (henceforth SZJ), provide evidence for the sublexical structure of SZJ signs and classify SZJ verbs with regard to their place of articulation. Using Picture Description Task methodology (Volterra et al. 1984) I interviewed seven SZJ native deaf signers and defined two main verb classes: those that are signed on the body and those that are not. According to the tradition of sign languages research (Padden 1983 for American Sign Language) they can be termed as body-anchored, non-agreeing or plain verbs and space-anchored or agreeing verbs, respectively. SZJ body-anchored verbs cannot adjust their place of articulation to the place of articulation of their arguments while SZJ space-anchored verbs move between two distinct loci in signing space adjusting the starting and the ending point of this movement to places where two of their arguments are articulated. I analyze this process as an overt verb-argument agreement and justify SZJ space-anchored verbs as agreeing verbs. I also consider non-manual agreement markings such as eye-gaze, head- and body-lean and show that these markings accompany space-anchored verbs more often than body-anchored verbs. Furthermore, I distinguish a subclass of SZJ verbs that are signed in one locus in space (usually on the non-dominant hand). I examine whether such verbs express agreement overtly or not. I conclude that they do because it shares the very same place of articulation with all of its arguments that are not body-anchored signs.
Ključne besede: agreement, Slovenian Sign Language, plain and agreeing verbs
Objavljeno v RUNG: 06.11.2017; Ogledov: 4767; Prenosov: 0
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