Linguistic universals and language change
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Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford [u.a.]
Oxford Univ. Press
2008
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Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schriftenreihe: | Oxford linguistics
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Online-Zugang: | Klappentext Inhaltsverzeichnis |
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adam_text | This book looks at the relationship between linguistic
universais
and language change.
Reflecting the resurgence of work in both fields over the last two decades, it addresses
two related issues of central importance in linguistics: the balance between
synchronie
and diachronic factors in accounting for
universais
of linguistic structure, and the means
of distinguishing genuine aspects of a universal human cognitive capacity for language
from regularities that may be traced to extraneous origins.
The volume brings together specially commissioned work by leading scholars,
including prominent representatives of generative and functional linguistics. It examines
rival explanations for linguistic
universais
and assesses the effectiveness of competing
models of language change. The authors investigate patterns and processes of gram¬
matical and lexical change across a wide range of languages; they consider the degree
to which common characteristics condition processes of change in related languages;
and examine how far differences in linguistic outcomes may be explained by cultural
or external factors.
This book will interest the wide range of scholars in linguistics and related fields
concerned with language change, historical linguistics, linguistic typology and
univer¬
sais,
and the nature of the human language faculty.
Jeff Good is Assistant Professor in the Department of Linguistics at the University
at Buffalo.
THE CONTRIBUTORS IX ABBREVIATIONS XIII 1. INTRODUCTION 1 JEFFGOOD 1.1
DIACHRONY SYNCHRONY, EXPLANATION, AND UNIVERSALS 1 1.2 ON THE SENSE OF
UNIVERSAL USED HERE 2 1.3 EXPLAINING UNIVERSALS 6 1.4 STRUCTURAL
APPROACHES 9 1.5 HISTORICAL APPROACHES 11 1.6 EXTERNAL APPROACHES 15 1.7
CONCLUSION 19 PART I: UNIVERSALS AND CHANGE: GENERAL PERSPECTIVES 2.
UNIVERSAIS CONSTRAIN CHANGE; CHANGE RESULTS IN TYPOLOGICAL
GENERALIZATIONS 23 PAUL KIPARSKY 2.1 THE RELATION BETWEEN SYNCHRONY AND
DIACHRONY 23 2.2 MORPHOLOGY AND BINDING PROPERTIES OF REFLEXIVES 29 2.3
SPLIT ERGATIVE CASE MARKING 33 2.4 CODA NEUTRALIZATION 45 2.5
STRESS/WEIGHT SOLIDARITY 49 2.6 CONCLUSION 52 3. ON THE EXPLANATION OF
TYPOLOGICALLY UNUSUAL STRUCTURES 54 ALICE C, HARRIS 3.1 INTRODUCTION 54
3.2 THE STRUCTURE OF THE ARGUMENT 55 3.3 GEORGIAN SPLIT CASE MARKING 57
3.4 UDI ENDOCLITICS 68 3.5 THE UNIFORMITARIAN HYPOTHESIS AND EXPLANATION
OF TYPOLOGICALLY UNUSUAL STRUCTURES 74 3.6 CONCLUSIONS 76 VI CONTENTS
PART II: PHONOLOGICAL UN TVER SALS: VARIATION, CHANGE, AND STRUCTURE 4.
CONSONANT EPENTHESIS; NATURAL AND UNNATURAL HISTORIES 79 JULIETTE
BLEVINS 4.1 INTRODUCTION 79 4.2 NATURAL HISTORY 83 4.3 UNNATURAL HISTORY
92 4.4 OTHER PLACES WHERE SEGMENTAL AND SYLLABIC MARKEDNESS FAIL 102 4.5
SUMMARY AND IMPLICATIONS 106 5. FORMA! UNIVERSALS AS EMERGENT PHENOMENA:
THE ORIGINS OF STRUCTURE PRESERVATION 108 JOAN L. BYBEE 5.1 INTRODUCTION
108 5.2 SUBSTANTIVE AND FORMAL UNIVERSALS 110 5.3 A FORMAL UNIVERSAL:
STRUCTURE PRESERVATION 111 5.4 THREE UNIDIRECTIONAL PATHS OF CHANGE IN
PHONOLOGY 114 5.5 A MODEL OF SOUND CHANGE 115 5.6 CATEGORIZATION OF
PHONETIC VARIANTS 116 5.7 SOUND CHANGE HAPPENS TO WORDS 117 5.8 FURTHER
CHANGES 119 5.9 THE EXPLANATION FOR STRUCTURE PRESERVATION 119 5.10
MECHANISMS: PROCESSES THAT ARE CONSTANTLY IN OPERATION AS LANGUAGE IS
USED 120 PART III: MORPHOLOGICAL RELATIONSHIPS: THE SHAPE OF PARADIGMS
6. PARADIGMATIC UNIFORMITY AND MARKEDNESS 125 ANDREW GARRETT 6.1
INTRODUCTION 125 6.2 MIDDLE AND MODERN ENGLISH 128 6.3 ANCIENT GREEK 132
6.4 DIRECTIONALITY AND THE ORIGIN OF MARKEDNESS 139 6.5 CONCLUSION 142
7. EXPLAINING UNIVERSAL TENDENCIES AND LANGUAGE PARTICULARS IN
ANALOGICAL CHANGE 144 ADAM ALBRIGHT 7.1 INTRODUCTION 144 7.2 TWO
APPROACHES TO ANALOGICAL CHANGE 147 7.3 A SYNCHRONIC MODEL OF PARADIGM
ACQUISITION 154 CONTENTS VII 7.4 TYPOLOGICAL TENDENCIES: EXPLORING THE
PARAMETER SPACE OF THE MODEL 166 7.5 CONCLUSION 180 PART IV: MORPHOSYN
TACTIC PATTERNS: THE FORM OF GRAMMATICAL MARKERS 8. CREATING ECONOMICAL
MORPHOSYNTACTIC PATTERNS IN LANGUAGE CHANGE 185 MARTIN HASPELMATH 8.1
OVERVIEW 185 8.2 UNIVERSAL ASYMMETRICAL MORPHOSYNTACTIC PATTERNS 186 8.3
ECONOMICAL CODING 187 8.4 ELEVEN COMPLEMENTARY EXPECTED ASSOCIATIONS 191
8.5 NON-COMPLEMENTARY EXPECTED PATTERNS 202 8.6 THE DIACHRONIC ORIGINS
OF ECONOMICAL/WELL-CODED PATTERNS 205 8.7 CONCLUSION: THE RELATION
BETWEEN DIACHRONY AND LANGUAGE UNIVERSALS 213 9. ON THE EXPLANATORY
VALUE OF GRAMMATICALIZATION 215 TANIA KUTEVA AND BERND HEINE 9.1
INTRODUCTION 215 9.2 THEORETICAL PRELIMINARIES: LANGUAGE-INTERNAL AND
CONTACT-INDUCED GRAMMATICALIZATION 217 9.3 TWO PUZZLES ABOUT
DEFI.NLTEN.ESS MARKING IN EUROPE 219 9.4 CONCLUSIONS 228 PART V: PHRASE
STRUCTURE: MODELING THE DEVELOPMENT OF SYNTACTIC CONSTRUCTIONS 10. THE
CLASSIFICATION OF CONSTITUENT ORDER GENERALIZATIONS AND DIACHRONIC
EXPLANATION 233 JOHN WHITMAN 10.1 INTRODUCTION 233 10.2 THE
CLASSIFICATION 234 10.3 STATISTICS 236 10.4 CROSS-CATEGORIAL
GENERALIZATIONS 238 10.5 DERIVATIONAL GENERALIZATIONS 242 10.6
HIERARCHICAL GENERALIZATIONS 248 10.7 CONCLUSION 251 11. EMERGENT
SERIALIZATION IN ENGLISH: PRAGMATICS AND TYPOLOGY 253 PAULJ. HOPPER 11.1
INTRODUCTION 253 11.2 TYPOLOGICAL FEATURES OF SERIALIZATION 254 VIII
CONTENTS 11.3 THE VERB TAKE IN SERIALIZATION 258 11.4 THE ENGLISH
HENDIADIC TAKE NP AND CONSTRUCTION 259 11.5 TAKE NP AND AS AN EMERGENT
CONSTRUCTION 264 11.6 TAKE NP AND FROM A TYPOLOGICAL VIEWPOINT 271 11.7
THE GREATER TAKE NP AND CONSTRUCTION 276 11.8 CONCLUSIONS 280 PART VI:
CONCLUSION 12. UNIVERSALS AND DIACHRONY: SOME OBSERVATIONS 237 JOHANNA
NICHOLS 12.1 INTRODUCTION 287 12.2 THE CURRENT STATE OF KNOWLEDGE 288
12.3 ARE THERE REALLY ANY UNIVERSALS? 292 12.4 FURTHER QUESTIONS 292
12.5 CONCLUSION 293 BIBLIOGRAPHY 295 INDEX 327
|
adam_txt |
This book looks at the relationship between linguistic
universais
and language change.
Reflecting the resurgence of work in both fields over the last two decades, it addresses
two related issues of central importance in linguistics: the balance between
synchronie
and diachronic factors in accounting for
universais
of linguistic structure, and the means
of distinguishing genuine aspects of a universal human cognitive capacity for language
from regularities that may be traced to extraneous origins.
The volume brings together specially commissioned work by leading scholars,
including prominent representatives of generative and functional linguistics. It examines
rival explanations for linguistic
universais
and assesses the effectiveness of competing
models of language change. The authors investigate patterns and processes of gram¬
matical and lexical change across a wide range of languages; they consider the degree
to which common characteristics condition processes of change in related languages;
and examine how far differences in linguistic outcomes may be explained by cultural
or external factors.
This book will interest the wide range of scholars in linguistics and related fields
concerned with language change, historical linguistics, linguistic typology and
univer¬
sais,
and the nature of the human language faculty.
Jeff Good is Assistant Professor in the Department of Linguistics at the University
at Buffalo.
THE CONTRIBUTORS IX ABBREVIATIONS XIII 1. INTRODUCTION 1 JEFFGOOD 1.1
DIACHRONY SYNCHRONY, EXPLANATION, AND UNIVERSALS 1 1.2 ON THE SENSE OF
UNIVERSAL USED HERE 2 1.3 EXPLAINING UNIVERSALS 6 1.4 STRUCTURAL
APPROACHES 9 1.5 HISTORICAL APPROACHES 11 1.6 EXTERNAL APPROACHES 15 1.7
CONCLUSION 19 PART I: UNIVERSALS AND CHANGE: GENERAL PERSPECTIVES 2.
UNIVERSAIS CONSTRAIN CHANGE; CHANGE RESULTS IN TYPOLOGICAL
GENERALIZATIONS 23 PAUL KIPARSKY 2.1 THE RELATION BETWEEN SYNCHRONY AND
DIACHRONY 23 2.2 MORPHOLOGY AND BINDING PROPERTIES OF REFLEXIVES 29 2.3
SPLIT ERGATIVE CASE MARKING 33 2.4 CODA NEUTRALIZATION 45 2.5
STRESS/WEIGHT SOLIDARITY 49 2.6 CONCLUSION 52 3. ON THE EXPLANATION OF
TYPOLOGICALLY UNUSUAL STRUCTURES 54 ALICE C, HARRIS 3.1 INTRODUCTION 54
3.2 THE STRUCTURE OF THE ARGUMENT 55 3.3 GEORGIAN SPLIT CASE MARKING 57
3.4 UDI ENDOCLITICS 68 3.5 THE UNIFORMITARIAN HYPOTHESIS AND EXPLANATION
OF TYPOLOGICALLY UNUSUAL STRUCTURES 74 3.6 CONCLUSIONS 76 VI CONTENTS
PART II: PHONOLOGICAL UN TVER SALS: VARIATION, CHANGE, AND STRUCTURE 4.
CONSONANT EPENTHESIS; NATURAL AND UNNATURAL HISTORIES 79 JULIETTE
BLEVINS 4.1 INTRODUCTION 79 4.2 NATURAL HISTORY 83 4.3 UNNATURAL HISTORY
92 4.4 OTHER PLACES WHERE SEGMENTAL AND SYLLABIC MARKEDNESS FAIL 102 4.5
SUMMARY AND IMPLICATIONS 106 5. FORMA! UNIVERSALS AS EMERGENT PHENOMENA:
THE ORIGINS OF STRUCTURE PRESERVATION 108 JOAN L. BYBEE 5.1 INTRODUCTION
108 5.2 SUBSTANTIVE AND FORMAL UNIVERSALS 110 5.3 A FORMAL UNIVERSAL:
STRUCTURE PRESERVATION 111 5.4 THREE UNIDIRECTIONAL PATHS OF CHANGE IN
PHONOLOGY 114 5.5 A MODEL OF SOUND CHANGE 115 5.6 CATEGORIZATION OF
PHONETIC VARIANTS 116 5.7 SOUND CHANGE HAPPENS TO WORDS 117 5.8 FURTHER
CHANGES 119 5.9 THE EXPLANATION FOR STRUCTURE PRESERVATION 119 5.10
MECHANISMS: PROCESSES THAT ARE CONSTANTLY IN OPERATION AS LANGUAGE IS
USED 120 PART III: MORPHOLOGICAL RELATIONSHIPS: THE SHAPE OF PARADIGMS
6. PARADIGMATIC UNIFORMITY AND MARKEDNESS 125 ANDREW GARRETT 6.1
INTRODUCTION 125 6.2 MIDDLE AND MODERN ENGLISH 128 6.3 ANCIENT GREEK 132
6.4 DIRECTIONALITY AND THE ORIGIN OF MARKEDNESS 139 6.5 CONCLUSION 142
7. EXPLAINING UNIVERSAL TENDENCIES AND LANGUAGE PARTICULARS IN
ANALOGICAL CHANGE 144 ADAM ALBRIGHT 7.1 INTRODUCTION 144 7.2 TWO
APPROACHES TO ANALOGICAL CHANGE 147 7.3 A SYNCHRONIC MODEL OF PARADIGM
ACQUISITION 154 CONTENTS VII 7.4 TYPOLOGICAL TENDENCIES: EXPLORING THE
PARAMETER SPACE OF THE MODEL 166 7.5 CONCLUSION 180 PART IV: MORPHOSYN
TACTIC PATTERNS: THE FORM OF GRAMMATICAL MARKERS 8. CREATING ECONOMICAL
MORPHOSYNTACTIC PATTERNS IN LANGUAGE CHANGE 185 MARTIN HASPELMATH 8.1
OVERVIEW 185 8.2 UNIVERSAL ASYMMETRICAL MORPHOSYNTACTIC PATTERNS 186 8.3
ECONOMICAL CODING 187 8.4 ELEVEN COMPLEMENTARY EXPECTED ASSOCIATIONS 191
8.5 NON-COMPLEMENTARY EXPECTED PATTERNS 202 8.6 THE DIACHRONIC ORIGINS
OF ECONOMICAL/WELL-CODED PATTERNS 205 8.7 CONCLUSION: THE RELATION
BETWEEN DIACHRONY AND LANGUAGE UNIVERSALS 213 9. ON THE EXPLANATORY
VALUE OF GRAMMATICALIZATION 215 TANIA KUTEVA AND BERND HEINE 9.1
INTRODUCTION 215 9.2 THEORETICAL PRELIMINARIES: LANGUAGE-INTERNAL AND
CONTACT-INDUCED GRAMMATICALIZATION 217 9.3 TWO PUZZLES ABOUT
DEFI.NLTEN.ESS MARKING IN EUROPE 219 9.4 CONCLUSIONS 228 PART V: PHRASE
STRUCTURE: MODELING THE DEVELOPMENT OF SYNTACTIC CONSTRUCTIONS 10. THE
CLASSIFICATION OF CONSTITUENT ORDER GENERALIZATIONS AND DIACHRONIC
EXPLANATION 233 JOHN WHITMAN 10.1 INTRODUCTION 233 10.2 THE
CLASSIFICATION 234 10.3 STATISTICS 236 10.4 CROSS-CATEGORIAL
GENERALIZATIONS 238 10.5 DERIVATIONAL GENERALIZATIONS 242 10.6
HIERARCHICAL GENERALIZATIONS 248 10.7 CONCLUSION 251 11. EMERGENT
SERIALIZATION IN ENGLISH: PRAGMATICS AND TYPOLOGY 253 PAULJ. HOPPER 11.1
INTRODUCTION 253 11.2 TYPOLOGICAL FEATURES OF SERIALIZATION 254 VIII
CONTENTS 11.3 THE VERB TAKE IN SERIALIZATION 258 11.4 THE ENGLISH
HENDIADIC TAKE NP AND CONSTRUCTION 259 11.5 TAKE NP AND AS AN EMERGENT
CONSTRUCTION 264 11.6 TAKE NP AND FROM A TYPOLOGICAL VIEWPOINT 271 11.7
THE GREATER TAKE NP AND CONSTRUCTION 276 11.8 CONCLUSIONS 280 PART VI:
CONCLUSION 12. UNIVERSALS AND DIACHRONY: SOME OBSERVATIONS 237 JOHANNA
NICHOLS 12.1 INTRODUCTION 287 12.2 THE CURRENT STATE OF KNOWLEDGE 288
12.3 ARE THERE REALLY ANY UNIVERSALS? 292 12.4 FURTHER QUESTIONS 292
12.5 CONCLUSION 293 BIBLIOGRAPHY 295 INDEX 327 |
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ctrlnum | (OCoLC)176819639 (DE-599)BVBBV023071856 |
dewey-full | 410.1 |
dewey-hundreds | 400 - Language |
dewey-ones | 410 - Linguistics |
dewey-raw | 410.1 |
dewey-search | 410.1 |
dewey-sort | 3410.1 |
dewey-tens | 410 - Linguistics |
discipline | Sprachwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft |
discipline_str_mv | Sprachwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft |
edition | 1. publ. |
format | Book |
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oclc_num | 176819639 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-703 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-29 DE-20 DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-521 DE-739 DE-824 DE-11 DE-83 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-703 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-29 DE-20 DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-521 DE-739 DE-824 DE-11 DE-83 DE-188 |
physical | XV, 339 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2008 |
publishDateSearch | 2008 |
publishDateSort | 2008 |
publisher | Oxford Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Oxford linguistics |
spellingShingle | Linguistic universals and language change Universals (Linguistics) Linguistic change Typology (Linguistics) Sprachwandel (DE-588)4056508-7 gnd Sprachtypologie (DE-588)4056503-8 gnd Sprachliche Universalien (DE-588)4077728-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4056508-7 (DE-588)4056503-8 (DE-588)4077728-5 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Linguistic universals and language change |
title_auth | Linguistic universals and language change |
title_exact_search | Linguistic universals and language change |
title_exact_search_txtP | Linguistic universals and language change |
title_full | Linguistic universals and language change ed. by Jeff Good |
title_fullStr | Linguistic universals and language change ed. by Jeff Good |
title_full_unstemmed | Linguistic universals and language change ed. by Jeff Good |
title_short | Linguistic universals and language change |
title_sort | linguistic universals and language change |
topic | Universals (Linguistics) Linguistic change Typology (Linguistics) Sprachwandel (DE-588)4056508-7 gnd Sprachtypologie (DE-588)4056503-8 gnd Sprachliche Universalien (DE-588)4077728-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Universals (Linguistics) Linguistic change Typology (Linguistics) Sprachwandel Sprachtypologie Sprachliche Universalien Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016274994&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016274994&sequence=000005&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT goodjeff linguisticuniversalsandlanguagechange |