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Review paper

ENGLISH NULL SUBJECT RELATIVE CLAUSES IN THE ARKANSAS REGIONAL VARIETY

By
Goran Grubešić
Goran Grubešić
Editor: Alica Arnaut

Abstract

Modern Standard English does not license null subjects in finite clauses, making the subject an obligatory element whenever the verb is inflected for person, number and tense, even when the meager English morphology fails to show it. A rare exception to this rule are relative clauses in certain non-standard varieties of English in which the wh-word or that which would otherwise occupy the subject position are not pronounced. This seems to be a systematic feature of those varieties and it is claimed to be under the influence of sociolinguistic factors, such as the level of formality, and to appear under specific syntactic conditions. This paper will examine some of these factors by analyzing a regional dialect found in the southern United States as depicted in the speech of characters in the crime drama series "True Detective".

Citation

This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. 

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