Nordic Word Order Database: Motivations, methods, material and infrastructure

Authors

  • Björn Lundquist UiT The Arctic university of Norway
  • Ida Larsson University of Oslo
  • Maud Westendorp UiT The Arctic university of Norway
  • Eirik Tengesdal University of Oslo
  • Anders Nøklestad University of Oslo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5617/nals.7529

Abstract

In this article, we present the Nordic Word Order Database (NWD), with a focus on the rationale behind it, the methods used in data elicitation, data analysis and the empirical scope of the database. NWD is an online database with a user-friendly search interface, hosted by The Text Laboratory at the University of Oslo, launched in April 2019 (https://tekstlab.uio.no/nwd). It contains elicited production data from speakers of all of the North Germanic languages, including several different dialects. So far, 7 fieldtrips have been conducted, and data from altogether around 250 participants (age 16–60) have been collected (approx. 55 000 sentences in total). The data elicitation is carried out through a carefully controlled production experiment that targets core syntactic phenomena that are known to show variation within and/or between the North Germanic languages, e.g., subject placement, object placement, particle placement and verb placement. In this article, we present the motivations and research questions behind the database, as well as a description of the experiment, the data collection procedure, and the structure of the database

Author Biographies

Björn Lundquist, UiT The Arctic university of Norway

Researcher, Department of Language and Culture 

Ida Larsson, University of Oslo

Professor, Department of Linguistics and Scandinavian Studies 

Maud Westendorp, UiT The Arctic university of Norway

Doctoral Research Fellow, Department of Language and Culture 

Eirik Tengesdal, University of Oslo

Doctoral Research Fellow, Department of Linguistics and Scandinavian Studies

Anders Nøklestad, University of Oslo

Senior Engineer,  The Text Laboratory, Department of Linguistics and Scandinavian Studies

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Published

2019-12-19

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Section

Papers