Abstract
Code-blending is the simultaneous expression of utterances using both a sign language and a spoken language. We expect that like code-switching, code-blending is linguistically constrained and thus we investigate two hypothesized constraints using an acceptability judgment task. Participants rated the acceptability of code-blended utterances designed to be consistent or inconsistent with these hypothesized constraints. We find strong support for the proposed constraint that each modality of code-blended utterances contributes content to a single proposition. We also find support for the proposed constraint that - at least for American Sign Language (ASL) and English - code-blended utterances make use of a single derivation which is realized using surface forms in the two languages, rather than two simultaneous derivations, one for each language. While this study was limited to ASL/English code-blending and further investigation is needed, we hope that this novel study will encourage future research comparing linguistic constraints on code-blending and code-switching.
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Lillo-Martin, D., Gagne, D., Avino, M., Bobaljik, J. D., Wurmbrand, S., De Quadros, R. M., & Keller, G. (2025). Linguistic characteristics of bimodal bilingual code-blending: Evidence from acceptability judgments. Bilingualism. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1366728925000409
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