distsilektiga
Distsilektiga is a theoretical construct in linguistics used to describe a pattern of contact-induced language change that involves two features: reciprocal influence among languages within a speech community and a stable, cyclic pattern of code-switching that yields a shared multi-lect repertoire. The term is a neologism intended to capture the multidimensional nature of multilingual discourse beyond simple loanword integration or unidirectional contact.
Etymology: The name combines a prefix meaning twofold with a coinage derived from Greek dialektos (dialect)
Concept and mechanisms: Distsilektiga arises in tightly knit bilingual networks where social norms of speech encourage
Manifestations: In data, it may appear as bidirectional semantic shifts, parallel grammatical constructions, and discourse-level cues
Relation to existing concepts: It overlaps with contact-induced change, code-switching, and lexical diffusion but emphasizes a
Critique and status: Distsilektiga remains debated and largely theoretical, with limited empirical documentation. Some researchers view