Some also resemble each other with respect to grammatical patterns, e.g. the way they form their future tenses. Most of these similarities result from the close genetic relation of the respective languages, like in the case of the Romance or the Germanic languages.
However, also genetically non-related but neighbouring languages may share such as the above-mentioned features. If this is the case for more than two languages in a certain geographical area, linguists trace these similarities to language contact and state that the languages have converged and thus form a linguistic area (Germ. Sprachbund). This is the case for the languages in Eastern Central Europe, and amongst them Czech, Slovak, Hungarian and German (in Austria) in particular. So far, the research tradition has, however, not provided sufficient case studies to prove that the languages have become more similar through contact with each other. Additionally, it has neglected the probably most important aspect of language contact: bilingual individuals and their way of dealing with the languages and varieties in their repertoire in certain social settings.
The planned series of workshops will bring together scholars of several languages spoken in Eastern Central Europe as well as of Slavic languages, especially Russian as a heritage language. Their goal is to critically discuss and revise the idea of the Central European linguistic area. They seek to integrate innovative theories and a mixed-methods approach to allow for the consideration of the bilingual individual and the sociolinguistic setting.
- Partners: Charles University (Prague), Humboldt University Berlin, University of Vienna
- Project Lead: Dr. Uliana Yazhinova and Dr. Philipp Wasserscheidt, Humboldt University Berlin
- Year: 2019