Languages (Dec 2023)

Diverging Grammaticalization Patterns across Spanish Varieties: The Case of <i>perdón</i> in Mexican and Peninsular Spanish

  • Marlies Jansegers,
  • Chantal Melis,
  • Jennie Elenor Arrington Báez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9010013
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. 13

Abstract

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This study investigates the contemporary grammaticalized uses of perdón (‘sorry’) in two varieties of Spanish, namely Mexican and Peninsular Spanish. Methodologically, the investigation is based on a taxonomy of offenses, organized around the concept of ‘face’ and based on spoken data of Spanish from Mexico and Spain. This taxonomy turns out to be a fruitful methodological tool for the analysis of apologetic markers: it does not only offer usage-based evidence for previous theorizing concerning the grammaticalization process of apologetic markers, but also leads to a refinement of these previous results from a contrastive point of view. Evidence from both corpora suggests a more advanced stage in the grammaticalization process of perdón in Mexican Spanish, where it can be used not only as a self-face-saving device geared towards the positive face of the speaker, but also in turn-taking contexts oriented towards the negative face of the interlocutor. Peninsular Spanish, on the other hand, resorts to a more varied gamut of apologetic markers in these contexts.

Keywords