This study analyses the integration of vowel-final non-native nouns in Faroese based on written language material ranging from computer-mediated communication to traditional printed media. In order to gain a holistic insight into the underlying processes, both intralinguistic – orthography, phonology, morphology – as well as extralinguistic – language norms, metalinguistic discourse – factors are examined.
Besides being the smallest and least researched modern-day Scandinavian language, Faroese also has one of Scandinavia’s youngest, most historicising orthographies, as well as a strong tradition of lexical purism. Its ideological climate is directly impacted by two polar opposites – progressive Danish on the one hand, and conservative Icelandic on the other. The observed integration strategies are described as the result of both native and non-native analogical forces that lead to ongoing contact-induced language change, including the refunctionalisation of the silent grapheme <ð>.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
| List of Figures | S. 13 | ||
| Abbreviations | S. 14 | ||
| Introduction | S. 15 | ||
| 1. | The Faroese language | S. 17 | |
| 2. | The present study | S. 29 | |
| 3. | Intralinguistic analysis | S. 43 | |
| 4. | More on <ð> | S. 239 | |
| 5. | Language Ideology in the Faroe Islands | S. 269 | |
| 6. | Metalinguistic discourse | S. 307 | |
| 7. | Summary and concluding remarks: On the integration of non-native nouns in Faroese | S. 367 | |
| 8. | References | S. 381 | |