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Lista de candidatos sometidos a examen:
1) subject expression (*)
(*) Términos presentes en el nuestro glosario de lingüística

1) Candidate: subject expression


Is in goldstandard

1
paper CO_FormayFuncióntxt284 - : Previous studies have repeatedly shown that the following factors (among others) significantly influence subject expression, particularly in the case of pronominal subjects: grammatical person/number (^[38]Silva-Corvalán, 1994 ; ^[39]Otheguy & Zentella, 2012; ^[40]Orozco, 2015), switch reference (^[41]Cameron, 1994; ^[42]Shin & Otheguy, 2009; ^[43]Carvalho & Child, 2011), tense-mood-aspect (TMA, ^[44]Cameron, 1994; ^[45]Travis, 2007; ^[46]Carvalho & Bessett, 2015), morphological ambiguity (^[47]Erker & Guy, 2012; ^[48]Lastra & Martín Butragueño, 2015; ^[49]Michnowicz, 2015), verb class (^[50]Travis, 2007; ^[51]Otheguy & Zentella, 2012; ^[52]Orozco, 2015), priming (^[53]Cameron, 1994; ^[54]Flores-Ferrán, 2002; ^[55]Travis, 2005), and polarity (^[56]Lastra & Martín Butragueño, 2015; ^[57]Geeslin & Gudmestad, 2016; ^[58]Limerick, 2018)^[59]^1.

2
paper CO_FormayFuncióntxt284 - : Gudmestad, A., & Geeslin, K. L. (2010). Exploring the Roles of Redundancy and Ambiguity in Variable Subject Expression: A Comparison of Native and Non-Native Speakers . In Borgonovo, C., Español-Echevarría, M., & Prévost, P. (eds.), Selected Proceedings of the 12th Hispanic Linguistics Symposium (pp. 270-283). Cascadilla Proceedings Project. [ [144]Links ]

3
paper CO_Lenguajetxt181 - : Grammatical person/number has been shown to be the strongest predictor of variable subject expression cross-dialectally (^[117]Orozco, 2015). Specifically, 1sg and third-person singular verbs favor overt pronouns (e.g. ^[118]Flores-Ferrán, 2002; ^[119]Lastra & Martín Butragueño, 2015; ^[120]Limerick, 2019; ^[121]Silva-Corvalán, 1994; ^[122]Shin, 2012). In fact, most studies have found that all singular forms in general are more likely to appear with overt SPs compared to plural forms, which tend to favor null SPs (^[123]Orozco, 2015). The general finding for singular and plural persons/numbers and their influence on subject expression has been explained by ^[124]Cameron (1993) in the following way:

4
paper CO_Lenguajetxt181 - : Geeslin, K., Linford, B., & Fafulas, S. (2015). Variable Subject Expression in Second Language Spanish: Uncovering the Developmental Sequence and Predictive Linguistic Factors . In A.M. Carvalho, R. Orozco & N. Shin (Eds.), Subject Pronoun Expression in Spanish: A Cross-Dialectal Perspective (pp. 191-210). Georgetown University Press. [ [308]Links ]

Evaluando al candidato subject expression:


1) orozco: 5
2) cameron: 4
3) singular: 3 (*)
4) carvalho: 3
5) martín: 3
6) travis: 3
7) otheguy: 3
8) geeslin: 3
9) butragueño: 3
10) shin: 3
11) lastra: 3
12) variable: 3 (*)

subject expression
Lengua: spa
Frec: 36
Docs: 7
Nombre propio: 2 / 36 = 5%
Coocurrencias con glosario: 2
Puntaje: 3.018 = (2 + (1+5.32192809488736) / (1+5.20945336562895)));
Candidato aceptado

Referencias bibliográficas encontradas sobre cada término

(Que existan referencias dedicadas a un término es también indicio de terminologicidad.)
subject expression
: 12. Cameron, R. y Flores-Ferrán, N. (2004). Perseveration of subject expression across regional dialects of Spanish. Spanish in Context, 1, 41-65.
: 34. Travis, C. (2007). Genre effects on subject expression in Spanish: Priming in narrative and conversation. Language Variation and Change, 19(2), 101-135.
: Cameron, R. (1995). The scope and limits of switch reference as a constraint on pronominal subject expression. Hispanic Linguistics, 6(7), 1-27.
: De Prada, A. (2009). Subject Expression in Minorcan Spanish: Consequences of Contact with Catalan (Ph.D. dissertation). [300]https://etda.libraries.psu.edu/catalog/9664.
: Geeslin, K. & Gudmestad, A. (2016). Subject Expression in Spanish: Contrasts between Native and Non-Native Speakers for First and Second-Person Singular Referents. Spanish in Context, 13(1), 53-79. [139]https://doi.org/10.1075/sic.13.1.03gee
: Limerick, P. P. (2018). Subject Expression in a Southeastern U.S. Mexican Community. [Doctoral thesis, University of Georgia, United States of America].
: Prada Pérez, A. de. (2009). Subject Expression in Minorcan Spanish: Consequences of Contact with Catalan. [Doctoral thesis, Pennsylvania State University, United States of America].
: Silva, C. (1982). Subject expression and placement in Mexican-American Spanish. En J. Amastae y L. Elías-Olivares (Eds.), Spanish in the United States: Sociolinguistic aspects (pp.93-120). Nueva York: Cambridge University Press.
: Travis, C. E. (2007). Genre Effects on Subject Expression in Spanish: Priming in Narrative and Conversation. Language Variation and Change , 19, 101-135. [167]https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954394507070081
: [105]Silva-Corvalán, Carmen. 1982. Subject expression and placement in Mexican-American Spanish, en J. Amastae y L. Elías-Olivares (eds.), Spanish in the United States: sociolinguistic aspects, New York, Cambridge University Press: 93-120.
: [109]Travis, Catherine. 2007. Genre effects on subject expression in Spanish: priming in narrative and conversation, Language Variation and Change, 19, 2: 101-136.