1 / 8

ICCEES VIII World Congress Stockholm July 2010

ICCEES VIII World Congress Stockholm July 2010. Russian as Lingua Franca in the Far Abroad Arto Mustajoki. Project . “Russian and Finnish as lingua francas” financed by the Academy of Finland with cooperation of the Russian Humanitarian Foundation. Starting points 1.

hamiltont
Download Presentation

ICCEES VIII World Congress Stockholm July 2010

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ICCEES VIII World Congress Stockholm July 2010 Russian as Lingua Franca in the Far Abroad Arto Mustajoki

  2. Project “Russian and Finnish as lingua francas” financed by the Academy of Finland with cooperation of the Russian Humanitarian Foundation

  3. Starting points 1 Types of speech situations • StNS ↔ StNS • Non-StNS ↔ Non-StNS(dialect speakers, speakers of other variants of language, children etc.) • StNS ↔ Non-StNS (baby talk) • NNS ↔ NS (foreigner talk) • NSS ↔ NNS (lingua franca, язык-посредник, язык межнационального общения)

  4. Starting points 2 When NSs of languages A and B encounter, they have the following options: • They refrain from interaction • They use non-verbal tools of communication and paper • They use an interpreter as a facilitator of communication • They both speak their native language, A and B • They use A or B • They use a third language (lingua franca) • The use of a combination of A and B (pidgin)

  5. Starting points 3 We use language… • for getting and giving information (a rather formal and simplified language) • for expression of emotions (need for quick reactions and command of nuances of “small words” of the language) • for expression of identity and/or belonginness to a certain group of people (status of different languages in that community, fashion)

  6. Starting points 4 The traditions of Russian linguistics Great interest in the language spoken by носитель литературного языка Debate on variants of Russian (Estonian / Swedish / Degetanian… Russian)

  7. Starting points 5 Certain features of English as a lingua franca • non-use of third person –s (She look very sad) • interchangeable us of who and which (a book who; a person which) • omission of definite and indefinite articles • increasing of redundancy (can we discuss about, How long time?) • overuse of general verbs likeput, take, make • plularisation of nouns (informations, advices) • overuse of that-clauses (I want that we discuss about that topic later)

  8. Arto Mustajoki Professor of the Russian Language Department of Modern Languages University of Helsinki http://www.helsinki.fi/~mustajok/index_en.html Publications in pdf: http://www.helsinki.fi/~mustajok/pub/pdf-publications.html arto.mustajoki@helsinki.fi

More Related