Hybrid Hashtags: #YouKnowYoureAKiwiWhen Your Tweet Contains M(a)over-barori and English

Trye, David; Calude, Andreea S.; Bravo-Marquez, Felipe; Keegan, Te Taka

Abstract

Twitter constitutes a rich resource for investigating language contact phenomena. In this paper, we report findings from the analysis of a large-scale diachronic corpus of over one million tweets, containing loanwords from te reo M (a) over bar ori, the indigenous language spoken in New Zealand, into (primarily, New Zealand) English. Our analysis focuses on hashtags comprising mixed-language resources (which we term hybrid hashtags), bringing together descriptive linguistic tools (investigating length, word class, and semantic domains of the hashtags) and quantitative methods (Random Forests and regression analysis). Our work has implications for language change and the study of loanwords (we argue that hybrid hashtags can be linked to loanword entrenchment), and for the study of language on social media (we challenge proposals of hashtags as "words," and show that hashtags have a dual discourse role: a micro-function within the immediate linguistic context in which they occur and a macro-function within the tweet as a whole).

Más información

Título según WOS: Hybrid Hashtags: #YouKnowYoureAKiwiWhen Your Tweet Contains M(a)over-barori and English
Título de la Revista: FRONTIERS IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
Volumen: 3
Editorial: FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
Fecha de publicación: 2020
DOI:

10.3389/frai.2020.00015

Notas: ISI