This study provides a critical review of the syntactic study of code-mixing with particular reference to the syntactic constraints paradigm. It examines seven major surface constraints deemed to have universal applicability and shows on the basis of cross-linguistic data that none of them Is universal. It is argued in the light of this finding that the postulation of universal syntactic constraints on code-mixing may be premature and that the constraint-oriented theory to the study of this phenomenon is descriptively inadequate because it fails to explicate its socio-psycholinguistics. The study maintains that factors such as degree of multilinguulity, who speaks whut vuriety of lunguuge to whom, when, andfor whut reuson are crucial parameters in the formulation of an adequate theory of code-switching and code-mixing. To achieve this objective, it is suggested that researchers integrate in their analysis three different but interrelated types of data: structural, psycholinguistic and sociolinguistic.
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