183 resultados para englannin kieli


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This thesis critically examines the patterns and processes of ethnic residential segregation in the Helsinki Metropolitan Area (HMA). These phenomena are examined in two main ways: a) between the native and immigrant populations and b) the extent to which different immigrant groups are sharing the same neighbourhoods. The main aim of the study is to test the extent to which the theoretical claims of the selective migration processes can explain the development of ethnic residential segregation in HMA. The data is mixed: it consists of neighbourhood-level statistics related to the migration, demography and housing stock. The selective migration flows are analysed within and between neighbourhood-types, defined on the basis of the percentages of foreign-language-speakers. For contextual purposes, the study also includes fifteen expert interviews who work within the housing sector. Firstly, the results show that, from the early 2000s the patterns of ethnic residential segregation have strengthened while the differences between neighbourhoods have grown. On a more general level the HMA can be divided into two main areas: some eastern and north-eastern neighbourhoods that have experienced the rise of immigrant concentrations and; the northern, north-western and southern parts of the HMA, where the number and percentages of immigrants have remained relatively low. However, within the eastern and north-eastern neighbourhoods there are also discernable internal differences that reflect the income levels of the inhabitants and the type of housing stock. The results also show that, the existing immigrant concentrations are ethnically and culturally mixed and thus qualitatively different from China town and Little-Italy enclaves of single groups of immigrants. Secondly, the results show that there are clear signs of the selective migration processes of the native and immigrant populations which have resulted in the discernable development of ethnic residential segregation. Migration flows of the native population have gravitated towards neighbourhoods, where the percentage of immigrants is below the HMA average. This has resulted in significant migration losses for neighbourhoods with established and developing concentrations of immigrants. Meanwhile, migration of immigrants has been drawn to neighbourhoods where their percentages are above the HMA average. However, the results also point to clear differences in the migration and spatial patterns of different immigrant groups. The spatial selectivity of migration is, thus, more prominent amongst the native population than when compared with immigrants. Overall, the results indicate that the reproduction of the selective migration flows of the native and immigrant populations will largely determine HMA s future development of ethnic residential segregation.

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This study describes the use of utterances ending in the conjunctions "ja" (‘and’), "mutta" (‘but’) or "että" (‘that’/‘so’) in Finnish conversation. It argues that in spoken interaction, these conjunctions are not only used as linking elements but also as final elements in interactional and linguistic units. In contrast to more traditional views, the study shows that final conjunctions do not always indicate incompleteness or project continuation, but that they can also form recognizable points for turn-transition. In these contexts they can be reanalyzed as final particles that leave some aspect of the turn implicit. The data for the study consist of audio-taped telephone conversations and videotaped service encounters. Situated within the framework of conversation analysis and interactional linguistics, the study discusses the interactional uses of conjunction-final turns and their recognizability as possibly complete units in talk-in-interaction. The analysis of conjunction-final utterances focuses on 1) participant orientation, and 2) their recurrent contexts of use. The results show that the recipients of conjunction-final utterances often treat them as sufficient and complete in their contexts by displaying understanding or agreement. When the same speaker continues after a pause, it is not always clear that the continuation was "planned" in advance; it can also be reactive to lack of expected uptake. In these cases, a turn can be analyzed as potentially complete even if the same speaker decides to continue after a pause. In the light of these observations, the study confirms the incremental nature of spoken language. All the final conjunctions under examination have recurrent and recognizable contexts of use. Most typically, a conjunction-final utterance is produced in the service of some earlier claim by the same speaker. The conjunction-final utterance may 1) specify the earlier claim with a detailing list ("ja"), 2) legitimize it by presenting grounds ("että") or 3) partly back down from it by making a concession ("mutta"). Together with the earlier claim, conjunction-final utterances form recognizable discourse patterns that are used for argumentative purposes. In these contexts, conjunctions are used to relinquish the floor instead of functioning as turn-holding devices. In conclusion, the study discusses the emergence of conjunctions as final particles – how their development can be explained. Conjunction-type final particles emerge from recurring situations in which the future course of the conjunction-final turn-so-far is clear enough to remain unsaid, to be left to inference. More specifically, this ability to leave something to inference often lies in the fixed discourse patterns that are conventionalized and predictable and thus reducible.

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Tutkielmassa selvitetään, millaiset piirteet ovat tyypillisiä Aili Somersalon kirjoittamien satuteosten nimistölle. Tarkasteltavana on 274 nimeä, jotka on poimittu kymmenestä Somersalon vuosina 1918 1951 julkaistusta lastenkirjasta. Nimiaineisto on jaettu kuuteen eri kategoriaan: ihmisten nimiin, eläinten nimiin, kuvitteellisiin nimiin, fantastisten satuolentojen nimiin, paikannimiin ja lainanimiin. Tutkielmassa keskitytään nimien rakenteellisten piirteiden ja funktioiden erittelyyn. Tämän lisäksi pohditaan, kuinka nimet ovat motivoituneet ja muuttuuko kirjailijan nimenanto vuosikymmenten aikana. Tutkielmassa sivutaan myös nimen ja nimityksen välistä rajaa sekä kyseenalaistetaan iso alkukirjain proprin tunnusmerkkinä kaunokirjallisessa kontekstissa. Aineiston nimille tyypillisiä rakenteellisia piirteitä ovat yksinimisyys, yhdysnimirakenne ja nimien kaksiosaisuus, appellatiivisuus ja adjektiivien esiintyminen nimenä tai nimenosana, johtimien käyttö sekä erilaiset äänteelliset piirteet. Nimen perustehtävän, identifioinnin, lisäksi aineiston nimet pyrkivät kuvailemaan, luokittelemaan ja lokalisoimaan tarkoitteitaan. Vuosikymmenten aikana teosten nimimäärä kasvaa maltillisesti. Teosten sisältämissä konventionaalisissa nimissä näkyy kulloisenkin vuosikymmenen nimimuoti. Merkillepantavaa on myös teoksissa esiintyvä hahmojen samanimisyys. Mielenkiintoisen lisän analyysiin tuovat aineiston lainanimet, jotka ovat peräisin paitsi universaalista satuperinteestä, myös suomalaisesta kansanmytologiasta ja Kalevalasta. Kansallisromanttisuus näkyy myös teoksiin valikoituneissa konventionaalisissa nimissä, joista suuri osa on omakielisiä. Kirjailija on lainannut teoksiinsa nimiä myös omasta elämänpiiristään. Somersalon nimenmuodostus nojaa vahvasti leksikkoon. Aineiston nimien ja nimitysten välinen raja ei ole yksiselitteinen, ja aineiston voikin luonnehtia koostuvan nimityksen kaltaisista nimistä ja nimen kaltaisista nimityksistä. Kaiken kaikkiaan aineiston nimet ovat hyvin informatiivisia, tarkoitteen fyysisiä tai mentaalisia ominaisuuksia kuvailevia, ja toimivat olennaisena osana tarinankerrontaa. Nimet kielivät kirjailijan kannattamasta ideologiasta, ja kytkeytyvät siten myös reaalimaailmaan. Vaikka kirjailijan nimenanto on osin huolimatonta, on se silti selvästi harkittua. Aili Somersalon luoma nimimaisema on omalakinen ja tunnistettava.

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This dissertation is a descriptive grammar of Ternate Chabacano, a Spanish-lexifier Creole spoken by 3.000 people in the town of Ternate, Philippines. The dissertation offers an analysis of the phonological, morphological, and syntactic system of the language. It includes an overview of the historical background, the current situation of the speech community and a collection of annotated texts. Ternate Chabacano shares many characteristics with its main adstrate language Tagalog as well as the dialectal varieties of Spanish. At present, English also exerts an influence, nevertheless mainly affecting its lexicon. The description offered is based on fieldwork conducted in Ternate. Spoken language collected through thematic interviews forms the main type of the material analysed. Information regarding the informants and text types is included in the examples. Ternate Chabacano has a five-vowel system and 17 consonant phonemes. The morphology of the language is largely isolating. Clitics are used extensively for expressing adverbial relations. The verbal system is based on the preverbal markers that express the category of tense, modality and aspect, among which aspect is the main dimension. Complex predicates and verbal chains are used in order to further distinguish aspect and modality, as well as changes of voice and valency. Intransitive verbs express motion, states, and reflexive actions, even though the majority of verbs can occur in both intransitive and transitive clauses. Ternate Chabacano is a nominative-accusative type language but the typological configuration of the Philippine languages influences the marking of its constituents. A case in point is constituted by the nominal determination system. The basic constituent order in a clause is VSO. Equative and attibutive clauses are formed by juxtaposition while the locative clauses feature a copula. Indefinite terms are expressed through existential constructions. The negation of existential clauses differs from standard negation but both are intensified in the same way. In spoken discourse, tag-questions are common. Pragmatic elements and social formulas reflect largely the corresponding Tagalog expressions. Coordination and subordination occur typically without overt markers but a variety of markers exists for expressing different relations, especially those made explicit by adverbial clauses. Verbal chains form a continuum from serial verbs to complementation and ultimately to coordination.

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Modal cohesion and subordination. The Finnish conditional and jussive moods in comparison to the French subjunctive This study examines verb moods in subordinate clauses in French and Finnish. The first part of the analysis deals with the syntax and semantics of the French subjunctive, mood occurring mostly in subordinate positions. The second part investigates Finnish verb moods. Although subordinate positions in Finnish grammar have no special finite verb form, certain uses of Finnish verb moods have been compared to those of subjunctives and conjunctives in other languages. The present study focuses on the subordinate uses of the Finnish conditional and jussive (i.e. the third person singular and plural of the imperative mood). The third part of the analysis discusses the functions of subordinate moods in contexts beyond complex sentences. The data used for the analysis include 1834 complex sentences gathered from newspapers, online discussion groups and blog texts, as well as audio-recorded interviews and conversations. The data thus consist of both written and oral texts as well as standard and non-standard variants. The analysis shows that the French subjunctive codes theoretical modality. The subjunctive does not determine the temporal and modal meaning of the event, but displays the event as virtual. In a complex sentence, the main clause determines the temporal and modal space within which the event coded by the subjunctive clause is interpreted. The subjunctive explicitly indicates that the space constructed in the main clause extends its scope over the subordinate clause. The subjunctive can therefore serve as a means for creating modal cohesion in the discourse. The Finnish conditional shares the function of making explicit the modal link between the components of a complex construction with the French subjunctive, but the two moods differ in their semantics. The conditional codes future time and can therefore occur only in non-factual or counterfactual contexts, whereas the event expressed by French subjunctive clauses can also be interpreted as realized. Such is the case when, for instance, generic and habitual meaning is involved. The Finnish jussive mood is used in a relatively limited number of subordinate clause types, but in these contexts its modal meaning is strikingly close to that of the French subjunctive. The permissive meaning, typical of the jussive in main clause positions, is modified in complex sentences so that it entails inter-clausal relation, namely concession. Like the French subjunctive, the jussive codes theoretical modal meaning with no implication of the truth value of the proposition. Finally, the analysis shows that verb moods mark modal cohesion, not only on the syntagmatic level (namely in complexe sentences), but also on the paradigmatic axis of discourse in order to create semantic links over entire segments of talk. In this study, the subjunctive thus appears, not as an empty category without function, as it is sometimes described, but as an open form that conveys the temporal and modal meanings emerging from the context.

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Pro gradu tutkielman aiheena on kielensisäinen koodinvaihto suomalaisessa Madventures-matkailuohjelmassa. Tutkielman tavoitteena on selvittää, mitä funktioita koodinvaihdolla on kyseisessä ohjelmassa ja millä tavoin koodinvaihto siinä ilmenee. Aineistona on ohjelman ensimmäinen tuotantokausi, joka on kuvattu vuonna 2002. Tuotantokausi koostuu kymmenestä 45 50 minuuttia pitkästä jaksosta. Tarkasteltavana on ohjelman kahden juontajan, Riku Rantalan ja Tuomas Tunna Milonoffin kieli. Tutkielmassa hyödynnettävät tutkimussuuntaukset ovat sosiolingvistinen variaationtutkimus ja keskustelunanalyysi. Analyysiluvut rakentuvat koodinvaihdon funktioiden mukaan. Luvussa 3 tarkastellaan koodinvaihtoja, jotka viestivät siirtymästä roolista toiseen. Koodinvaihdon funktiona voi tällöin olla aikaisemman, todella tapahtuneen tai sellaisena esitetyn puhetilanteen referointi, kuvitteellisen puhetilanteen esittäminen tai ohjelman juontajan rooliin orientoituminen. Luvussa 4 käsitellään koodinvaihtoa merkkinä siirtymästä näkökulmasta toiseen. Vaihtelevina näkökulmina voivat tällöin olla persoonallinen ja objektiivinen, nykyinen ja mennyt aika tai puhujan ja katsojan näkökulma. Luku 5 on sekaluku, johon on koottu muita aineistossani esiintyviä koodinvaihdon funktioita. Niitä ovat moodinvaihto, vuoron vastaanottajan vaihtuminen, siirtyminen toiminnasta toiseen, edeltävän käskyn vahvistaminen tai sen ilmaiseminen, ettei sanottu asia pidä paikkaansa. Useilla koodinvaihdoilla on samaan aikaan monia eri funktioita. Esimerkiksi kuvitteellisen puhetilanteen referointiin liittyy aina myös moodinvaihto vakavasta humoristiseen. Enemmistö koodinvaihdoista tapahtuu pääkaupunkiseudun puhekielen ja yleiskielen välillä. Jonkin verran koodinvaihtoa tapahtuu myös murteelliseen koodiin tai toiseen kielelliseen tyyliin. Tavallisesti puhujat osoittavat orientoituvansa toiseen koodiin paralingvistisillä piirteillä mutta myös muilla ei-kielellisillä keinoilla kuten ilmeillä ja eleillä. Paralingvististen piirteiden esiintyminen vaihtelee jossain määrin koodinvaihdon funktioiden mukaan. Silloin kun koodinvaihdon funktiona on referointi tai siirtyminen katsojan näkökulmaan, koodinvaihdon yhteydessä esiintyy usein äänenlaadun muutoksia sekä muusta puheesta poikkeavaa prosodiaa. Muissa funktiossa niitä esiintyy harvemmin. Koodinvaihto ilmenee toisinaan myös lauserakenteessa, erityisesti viestiessään näkökulman muutoksesta. Erikoinen piirre tämän tutkielman koodinvaihdoissa on se, ettei koodinvaihto aina koske sanastoa. Vaikka äänne- ja muotopiirteet ovatkin yleiskielisiä, voi koodinvaihtojakson sanasto siitä huolimatta olla slangipitoista. Runsas slangisanasto onkin Madventuresin kielelle kaikkein ominaisin piirre. Koodinvaihdossa on useimmiten olennaisempaa kontrasti kahden eri kielimuodon välillä kuin se, mihin kielimuotoon koodi vaihtuu. Tällöin koodinvaihdon funktio on sama riippumatta siitä, vaihtuuko koodi pääkaupunkiseudun puhekielestä yleiskieleen vai esimerkiksi murteeseen. Tietyissä funktioissa koodinvaihtojakson kielimuodolla on kuitenkin merkitystä funktion kannalta. Esimerkiksi ohjelman juontajan rooliin siirryttäessä koodi vaihtuu poikkeuksetta pääkaupunkiseudun puhekielestä yleiskieleen. Sen sijaan esimerkiksi referoitaessa kielimuodolla ei ole juuri merkitystä funktion kannalta, vaan referaateissa esiintyy useita eri kielimuotoja. Ohjelman juontajat eivät vaihda koodia samalla tavalla, vaan heidän koodinvaihtotavoissaan on eroja. Riku vaihtaa aineistossa koodia selvästi useammin kuin Tunna. Lisäksi hän käyttää koodinvaihtoa useammissa funktioissa ja hyödyntää koodinvaihdossa useita eri kielimuotoja. Sen sijaan Tunnan koodinvaihdot rajoittuvat lähes yksinomaan pääkaupunkiseudun puhekielen ja yleiskielen välille.

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This study describes how students influence their possibilities of participating in whole-class conversation. The main objective is to investigate the verbal and non-verbal resources used by students to modify the participant roles of the ongoing conversation. The resources studied are attention-getting devices such as hand-raising and address terms, recycling and other forms of collaborative talk, means of reference to persons, such as pronouns, as well as gaze and other embodied resources. The theoretical and methodological framework adopted in this study is that of conversation analysis. The data consist of ten videotaped lessons of Finnish as a second language in three secondary schools (grades 7 9) in southern Finland; the number of students per group varies from five to ten. Finnish has a triple role in the data as the medium of teaching, the target language, and the lingua franca used by the participants. The findings show that the multi-party context of the classroom conversation is both a disadvantage and an affordance for student participation. The students possess multiple tools to overcome and deal with the encumbrances posed by the large number of participants. They combine various techniques in order to actively compete for public turns, and they monitor the ongoing conversation carefully to adjust their participation to the activities of other participants. Sometimes the whole-class conversation splits into two separate conversations, but participants usually orient to the overlapping nature of the talk and tend to bring the conversations together rapidly. On the other hand, students skilfully make use of other participants and their talk to increase and diversify their own possibilities to participate. For example, they recycle elements of each other s turns or refer to the currently speaking student in order to gain access to the conversation. Students interact with each other even during the public whole-class conversation. Students orient to one another often even when talking to the teacher, but they also address talk directly to one another, as part of the public conversation. In this way students increase each other s possibilities of participation. The interaction is constantly multi-layered: in addition to the pedagogic agenda, the students orient to social goals, for example, by teasing each other and putting on humorous performances for their peer audience. The student student participation arises spontaneously from a genuine need to communicate and thus represents authentic language use: by talking to each other, often playfully, the students appropriate Finnish vocabulary, grammar, and expressions. In this way the structure of the interaction reflects the particular nature of Finnish as a second language lessons: all talk serves the pedagogic goal of enabling students to communicate in the target language.

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The aim of the study is to investigate the use of finlandisms in an historical perspective, how they have been viewed from the mid-19th century to this day, and the effect of language planning on their use. A finlandism is a word, a phrase, or a structure that is used only in the Swedish varieties used in Finland (i.e. in Finland Swedish), or used in these varieties in a different meaning than in the Swedish used in Sweden. Various aspects of Finland-Swedish language planning are discussed in relation to language planning generally; in addition, the relation of Finland Swedish to Standard Swedish and standard regional varieties is discussed, and various types of finlandisms are analysed in detail. A comprehensive picture is provided of the emergence and evolution of the ideology of language planning from the mid-19th century up until today. A theoretical model of corpus planning is presented and its effect on linguistic praxis described. One result of the study is that the belief among Finland-Swedish language planners that the Swedish language in Finland must not be allowed to become distanced from Standard Swedish, has been widely adopted by the average Finland Swede, particularly during the interwar period, following the publication of Hugo Bergroth s work Finlandssvenska in 1917. Criticism of this language-planning ideology started to appear in the 1950s, and intensified in the 1970s. However, language planning and the basis for this conception of language continue to enjoy strong support among Swedish-speaking Finns. I show that the editing of Finnish literary texts written in Swedish has often been somewhat amateurish and the results not always linguistically appropriate, and that Swedish publishers have in fact adopted a rather liberal attitude towards finlandisms. My conclusion is that language planning has achieved rather modest results in its resistance to finlandisms. Most of the finlandisms used in 1915 were still in use in 2005. Finlandisms occur among speakers of all ages, and even among academically educated people despite their more elevated style. The most common finlandisms were used by informants of all ages. The ones that are firmly rooted are the most established, in other words those that are stylistically neutral, seemingly genuinely Swedish, but which are nevertheless strongly supported by Finnish, and display a shift in meaning as compared with Standard Swedish.

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Tiivistelmien kieli suomi.

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Tiivistelmien kieli suomi.

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Tiivistelmien kieli suomi.

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Tiivistelmien kieli suomi.

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Tiivistelmien kieli saksa.

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Tiivistelmän kieli suomi.

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Language Documentation and Description as Language Planning Working with Three Signed Minority Languages Sign languages are minority languages that typically have a low status in society. Language planning has traditionally been controlled from outside the sign-language community. Even though signed languages lack a written form, dictionaries have played an important role in language description and as tools in foreign language learning. The background to the present study on sign language documentation and description as language planning is empirical research in three dictionary projects in Finland-Swedish Sign Language, Albanian Sign Language, and Kosovar Sign Language. The study consists of an introductory article and five detailed studies which address language planning from different perspectives. The theoretical basis of the study is sociocultural linguistics. The research methods used were participant observation, interviews, focus group discussions, and document analysis. The primary research questions are the following: (1) What is the role of dictionary and lexicographic work in language planning, in research on undocumented signed language, and in relation to the language community as such? (2) What factors are particular challenges in the documentation of a sign language and should therefore be given special attention during lexicographic work? (3) Is a conventional dictionary a valid tool for describing an undocumented sign language? The results indicate that lexicographic work has a central part to play in language documentation, both as part of basic research on undocumented sign languages and for status planning. Existing dictionary work has contributed new knowledge about the languages and the language communities. The lexicographic work adds to the linguistic advocacy work done by the community itself with the aim of vitalizing the language, empowering the community, receiving governmental recognition for the language, and improving the linguistic (human) rights of the language users. The history of signed languages as low status languages has consequences for language planning and lexicography. One challenge that the study discusses is the relationship between the sign-language community and the hearing sign linguist. In order to make it possible for the community itself to take the lead in a language planning process, raising linguistic awareness within the community is crucial. The results give rise to questions of whether lexicographic work is of more importance for status planning than for corpus planning. A conventional dictionary as a tool for describing an undocumented sign language is criticised. The study discusses differences between signed and spoken/written languages that are challenging for lexicographic presentations. Alternative electronic lexicographic approaches including both lexicon and grammar are also discussed. Keywords: sign language, Finland-Swedish Sign Language, Albanian Sign Language, Kosovar Sign Language, language documentation and description, language planning, lexicography