Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/119359
Title: Languages in contact : is the gender assignment system in Maltese undergoing change?
Other Titles: Shifts and Patterns in Maltese
Authors: Farrugia, George
Keywords: Maltese language -- Grammar
Maltese language -- Gender
Grammar, Comparative and general -- Gender
Maltese language -- Noun
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Citation: Farrugia, G. (2016). Languages in contact : is the gender assignment system in Maltese undergoing change?. In G. Puech & B. Saade (Eds.), Shifts and Patterns in Maltese (pp. 293-314). Berlin: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Abstract: The nominal gender system serves two basic functions:(a) the classification of nouns as belonging to a particular category;(b) the triggering of grammatical agreement that is apparent in those words of different grammatical categories associated with the controlling noun. This paper focuses on (a). Being an offshoot of Arabic, Maltese inherited a system comprising two gender categories, masculine and feminine. This means that every noun, whether animate or inanimate, native or borrowed, has to be assigned a gender on the basis of some criterion, even if the language of origin of a loan word does not itself have the grammatical category of gender. Numerous nouns of Romance origin were introduced in Maltese through contact first with Sicilian and subsequently with Italian, two languages that also have a masculine/feminine-based gender system. Some of these nouns introduced new noun endings, but most of them fit in with the established native system. However, the more recent contact, with English has complicated matters. English is a language whose gender system is conceptual. Inanimate nouns are not marked for gender. Although, at a glance, nouns borrowed from English appear to have adopted the model previously established by nouns of Arabic, Sicilian and Italian origin, closer inspection of a corpus of almost 23,000 nouns reveals novel tendencies that are being introduced by English nouns that deviate from the established gender assignment patterns in Maltese.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/119359
ISBN: 9783110495638
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacArtMal

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