Language Contact, Not Grammar Rules, Drives How Balochi Speakers Express Action
A new linguistic study reveals that how speakers of different Balochi dialects express ongoing actions stems from contact between communities rather than internal language evolution. The finding challenges assumptions about how languages naturally change and has implications for understanding language preservation and the cultural dynamics of multilingual regions across Iran, Pakistan, and Afghanistan.
Originaltitel: Progressive Constructions in Different Balochi Dialects from a Diachronic and an Areal Linguistic Point of View
<p>The present study explores the progressive constructions in different Balochi dialects from a diachronic and an areal linguistic point of view. Previous studies on different Balochi dialects (Buddruss 1988; Baranzehi 2003; Farrell 2003; Axenov 2006; Ahangar 2007; Jahani and Korn 2009; Nourzaei et al. 2015; Korn and Nourzaei 2019; Korn 2020, 2017a and 2017b) have described progressive constructions, but discussion from a diachronic and an areal linguistic point of view is largely lacking. I will argue that the diversity of progressive constructions in Balochi dialects is a result of language contact and diffusion rather than an internal historical development that can be explained in terms of grammaticalization. In addition, there is no trace of a morphological progressive construction in written samples of Balochi. The general imperfective marker =a= (verbal clitic) covers ongoing meaning. To the extent that this marker has lost its ongoing meaning and become a general indicative marker in the present domain, the language has filled the progressive gap with new constructions which are basically a result of language and dialect contact. The new progressive constructions are mainly periphrastic constructions that represent either direct or indirect code copying from dominant languages and other Balochi dialects.</p>