Leyre Rojo Horrillo | University of the Basque Country, Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea (original) (raw)
Address: Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain
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Sancho el Sabio Fundazioa, 2023
Despite the fact that Roncalese is an already dead dialect, it has made a remarkable impression o... more Despite the fact that Roncalese is an already dead dialect, it has made a remarkable impression on many scholars. However, the dialect’s historical corpus, philologically speaking, it is yet to decide, since there are no researches that bear in mind the entire corpus itself, even though it has been mentioned and approached in several papers. Hence, we have decided to research on the philological analysis in order to prove that the numerous studies that have been made of the Roncalese, despite their different aims, they might be valuable material to reconstruct the diachronic evolution of it. Therefore, we have explored the Roncal Valley corpus from the Sancho el Sabio Foundation in Vitoria-Gasteiz, in order to confirm that other lines of research are as necessary as those regarding the dialect.
ASJU, 2023
In this article, we will analyze the opposition of occlusives posterior to n-/l-that have been de... more In this article, we will analyze the opposition of occlusives posterior to n-/l-that have been debated in the history of Basque. Until recently, it was argued that the voiced stop is the oldest sound after the lateral and the nasal, as found in Roncalese and Souletin. Mitxelena (1961), however, argued the opposite clearly and concisely. We will prove this, together with the grammaticalization and “Trask's law”, through 17th-century letters by Gabriet Etxart and Miguel Ros. Thus, we will show that the evolution of occlusives was morphological at some point. Then, we will explain in detail how it was phonologically disseminated and how it spread from its old legacy to borrowings. In order to do so, it is essential to bear in mind both sociolinguistic conditions and differences we have found in the corpus.
Sancho el Sabio Fundazioa, 2023
Despite the fact that Roncalese is an already dead dialect, it has made a remarkable impression o... more Despite the fact that Roncalese is an already dead dialect, it has made a remarkable impression on many scholars. However, the dialect’s historical corpus, philologically speaking, it is yet to decide, since there are no researches that bear in mind the entire corpus itself, even though it has been mentioned and approached in several papers. Hence, we have decided to research on the philological analysis in order to prove that the numerous studies that have been made of the Roncalese, despite their different aims, they might be valuable material to reconstruct the diachronic evolution of it. Therefore, we have explored the Roncal Valley corpus from the Sancho el Sabio Foundation in Vitoria-Gasteiz, in order to confirm that other lines of research are as necessary as those regarding the dialect.
ASJU, 2023
In this article, we will analyze the opposition of occlusives posterior to n-/l-that have been de... more In this article, we will analyze the opposition of occlusives posterior to n-/l-that have been debated in the history of Basque. Until recently, it was argued that the voiced stop is the oldest sound after the lateral and the nasal, as found in Roncalese and Souletin. Mitxelena (1961), however, argued the opposite clearly and concisely. We will prove this, together with the grammaticalization and “Trask's law”, through 17th-century letters by Gabriet Etxart and Miguel Ros. Thus, we will show that the evolution of occlusives was morphological at some point. Then, we will explain in detail how it was phonologically disseminated and how it spread from its old legacy to borrowings. In order to do so, it is essential to bear in mind both sociolinguistic conditions and differences we have found in the corpus.