6533b852fe1ef96bd12aa400

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Figure–Ground Spatial Relationships in Finnish Sign Language Discourse

Danny De Weerdt

subject

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageHistorygroundP1-1091Sign languagespatial relationshipsLanguage and Linguistics030507 speech-language pathology & audiology03 medical and health sciencesviittomakielisequentiality0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPhilology. Linguisticskeskustelunanalyysi05 social sciencesFigure–groundsimultaneityLinguisticsfigureFinnish sign languagefinnish sign languagesanajärjestyssuomalainen viittomakielidiscourse0305 other medical sciencelauseoppi

description

AbstractThis study is about expressing spatial relationships between Figure and Ground in Finnish Sign Language discourse and shows that the variation in this expression is primarily discourse dependent. The main findings are, first, that Ground mainly precedes Figure whether the Figure is new or a known referent within the discourse; the reverse order is possible only when the Figure is known. Second, the lexical signolla(‘have’) appears more frequently in expressing spatial relationships with a new Figure and less frequently with a known Figure but never in a construction with Figure preceding Ground; the formoli(‘had’), referring to the past, appears only in Figure preceding Ground constructions when Figure is known. Finally, the main way to express the spatial relationship between Ground and Figure is either the simultaneous production of the units, or Ground and an adposition sign. A sequential strategy is another way of expressing spatial relationships but this can be used only when the Figure is new within the discourse. The choice of strategy can be attributed to the emphasis put on the Figure’s presence when it is new while with a known Figure, the emphasis is on the location of that Figure.

https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2020-0041