Reviewed by Andreea S. Calude, The University of Auckland
There are few languages that encompass the history, diversity, and political load that can be observed with the Romani language. Spoken by the Roma, the Sinti, the Kale, and others most commonly placed under the label term of ‘gypsy’, Romani developed since the sixteenth century as a language of nomadic people, constantly on the move and often highly isolated from each other. From a linguistic standpoint, this has led to a rich source of interesting avenues for research, such as dialectal issues (relating to how the various dialects of the language evolved), language-contact problems (examining how the various dominant languages spoken in the countries that were settled by Romani speakers have influenced the Romani language), historical development, sociolinguistic concerns, and other general theoretical linguistics issues.
This volume—the proceedings to the 6th International Conference on Romani Linguistics held in Graz in 2002 (following previous conferences in Hamburg 1993, Amsterdam 1994, and Manchester 1998)—is divided into five parts: ‘Romani dialectology’ (Part 1), ‘Descriptive studies on individual Romani dialects’ (Part 2), ‘Language change with and without contact’ (Part 3), ‘Computational linguistics’ (Part 4), and ‘Sociolinguistics’ (Part 5). The computational linguistics section (though only containing one paper) is indicative of the innovative directions undertaken by Romani linguistics researchers, in using corpora and other such electronic databases.
Part 1 includes a discussion by Yaron Matras revisiting general issues of dialectology in Romani linguistics (7–22) and a study by Birgit Igla investigating the Sinti-Manuš dialect group (23–47).
There are four papers in Part 2. Lev Cherenkov gives a brief examination of the Russian variety of Plaščuno (63–47); Irene Sechidou analyzes the Greek Romani variety of Ajios Athanasios (48–59); Ignasi-Xavier Adiego looks at present day Caló (60–78); and Zoran Lapov discusses the different Croatian Roma dialects (79–89).
Part 3 includes three papers on verbal change phenomena: Desislava Draganova on the borrowing of Turkish verb forms into Bulgarian Romani (90–98), Barbara Schrammel on borrowing and calquing of German verbal affixes in Austrian Romani varieties (99–113), and Helena Pirttisaari on borrowed and inherited past participle morphs in Finnish Romani (114–27). The remaining two papers by Norbert Boretzky (128–43) and Gitte G. Simonsen (144–49) consider sounds change and semantic change, respectively.
Part 4 on computational linguistics contains one paper, by Kimmo Granqvist, who uses data from the ROMLEX project (documenting the Romani lexicon from as many different varieties and dialects as possible) to investigate the implementation of a two-level morphology processor for Finnish Romani (150–62).
The final part has three papers on different aspects of Romani sociolinguistics. Victor Friedman examines a trilingual Macedonian newspaper (163–73); Jelena Petrović and Lada Stefanović describe the situation of Roma refugees in Kosovo (174–81); and Elena Marushiakova and Vesselin Popov focus on the Gypsy nomadic groups of Bulgaria (182–87).
The volume constitutes a comprehensive and varied compendium of research conducted on Romani linguistics and is of interest to anyone working not only on Romani linguistics, but also on sociolinguistic and dialectal variation, language contact, as well as theoretical linguistics.