Abstract:
In bilingual and multilingual sOcietIes, there are usually at least two interacting
language groups, each representing different cultural and I inguistic features. Sri Lanka
is a multilingual country where there is a tendency of mixing. two languages as a
communicative strategy used by the speakers. It has been observed that mixing of
indigenous languages - Sinhala and Tamil and English is a common speech behaviour
which occurs in the discourse of educated bilinguals in Sri Lanka. There have been
several studies on sociolinguistic, structural linguistic and psycho linguistic aspects of
code-mixing in different countries. In recent years, researchers have increasingly
focused on the linguistic constraints on code-mixing.
The aim of this study is to investigate the rules and constraints of code-mixing (CM) in
Tamil-English mixed language data. The focus of the present study of Tamil-English
mixed discourse of educated urban bilinguals in Jaffna, Sri Lanka is of two fold. First,
from a sociolinguistic point of view, language mixing originates in response to social
motivations, and social factors which cannot be ignored in any analysis. Second, from a
syntactic point of view, it is proposed that code-mixing is governed by a host code/guest
code principle. This principle says that in a code-mixed discourse involving languages
Ll and L2, where Ll is the host code and L2 is the guest code, the morphosyntactic
rules of L2 must conform to the morphosyntactic rules of L I, the language of the
discourse. In order to determine the sociolinguistic factors which contribute to the
development of Tamil-English CM and the rules that govern Tamil-English CM and
possible syntactic constraints, the researcher involved the qualitative method of
analysis. The present study drew upon data collected from sociolinguistic questionnaire,
interview, observation and a recorded spontaneous conversation between bilinguals in a
language contact situation in which the two languages are syntactically very different
from each other, namely, Tamil and English. The study addresses the questions whether
there are sociolinguistic factors which trigger Tamil-English code-mixed speech and
whether there are syntactic constraints on Tamil-English CM. The researcher has
examined sociolinguistic and linguistic aspects of code-mixing and found that there are
factors such as demographic, attitudinal, relationship of interlocutors and language
choice and domains which contribute to code-mixed speech and code-mixing is indeed
a rule governed phenomenon, that is, there are constraints that govern where in a
sentence a code-mix can occur and where it cannot occur.