Abstract

<p class="p1">Studies on Subject Pronoun Expression (SPE) in the Portuguese-speaking world have shown a distinction between European Portuguese, which is a Null Subject Language (NSL) with high rates of null subjects, and Brazilian Portuguese, which is controversially treated as a partial-NSL and exhibits a considerably lower rate of null subjects. No specific studies have been conducted on the matter on Santomean Portuguese, but we know that both null and overt subject personal pronouns exist in this variety of Portuguese. The objective of this paper is to investigate variation in SPE in Santomean Portuguese, and to situate this variety of Portuguese in comparison with other varieties. Results of the variationist analyses show that Santomean Portuguese patterns more like European Portuguese in its high rate of use of null subject. Interestingly, and contrary to previous studies, Santomeans with a higher level of education disfavor the use of null subject, which I relate to a sensitivity to grammatical ideology and the favoring of the overt subject in more formal situations. Most of the results regarding the linguistic predictors, which are stronger than the social predictors, relate Santomean Portuguese to other varieties of Portuguese, and to Spanish.

Highlights

  • Languages that do not require the presence of an overt subject personal pronoun ( SPP) are called Null Subject Languages ( NSL), or pro-drop languages, and the ones that ordinarily require the presence of an overt SPP are called non-Null Subject Languages, or non-pro-drop languages

  • Rbrul was used to perform one-level analyses and obtain factor weights, a statistical measure often used in sociolinguistics that indicates to what degree a variable is favored or disfavored

  • Santomean Portuguese has a high rate of null subjects (68.5%), which makes it more similar to European Portuguese (78%) than to Brazilian Portuguese (44%) in its use of pronouns

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Summary

Introduction

Languages that do not require the presence of an overt subject personal pronoun ( SPP) are called Null Subject Languages ( NSL), or pro-drop languages, and the ones that ordinarily require the presence of an overt SPP are called non-Null Subject Languages ( non-NSL), or non-pro-drop languages. There is no agreement on this classification, some languages are considered to be partial-NSL, such as Brazilian Portuguese, Finnish, and Marathi. Those languages allow null subjects under more restricted conditions than full-fledged NSL (Holmberg, Nayudu & Sheehan 2009). Variation in Subject Pronoun Expression ( SPE) is of interest to sociolinguists because the speaker has the option of expressing the SPP or omitting it. All sociolinguistic research has found correlations between those factors and the SPE. Even so, this syntactic variable remains highly debated among scholars who work on the topic

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