|
Showing 1 - 10 of
10 matches in All Departments
The sixteen chapters in this volume are written by typologists and
typologically oriented field linguists who have completed their
Ph.D. theses in the first four years of this millennium. The
authors address selected theoretical questions of general
linguistic relevance drawing from a wealth of data hitherto
unfamiliar to the general linguistic audience. The general aim is
to broaden the horizons of typology by revisiting existing
typologies with larger language samples, exploring domains not
considered in typology before, taking linguistic diversity more
seriously, strengthening the connection between typology and areal
linguistics, and bridging the gap to other fields, such as
historical linguistics and sociolinguistics. The papers cover
grammatical phenomena from phonology, morphology up to the syntax
of complex sentences. The linguistic phenomena scrutinized include
the following: foot and stress, tone, infixation, inflection vs.
derivation, word formation, polysynthesis, suppletion, person
marking, reflexives, alignment, transitivity, tense-aspect-mood
systems, negation, interrogation, converb systems, and complex
sentences. More general methodological and theoretical issues, such
as reconstruction, markedness, semantic maps, templates, and use of
parallel corpora, are also addressed. The contributions in this
volume draw from many traditional fields of linguistics
simultaneously, and show that it is becoming harder and maybe also
less desirable to keep them separate, especially when taking a
broadly cross-linguistic approach to language. The book is of
interest to typologists and field linguists, as well as to any
linguists interested in theoretical issues in different subfields
of linguistics.
The present volume is a broad overview of methods and methodologies
in linguistics, illustrated with examples from concrete research.
It collects insights gained from a broad range of linguistic
sub-disciplines, ranging from core disciplines to topics in
cross-linguistic and language-internal diversity or to
contributions towards language, space and society. Given its
critical and innovative nature, the volume is a valuable source for
students and researchers of a broad range of linguistic interests.
The volume presents new insights into two basic theoretical issues
hotly debated in recent work on grammaticalization and language
contact: grammatical replication and grammatical borrowability. The
key issues are: How can grammatical replication be distinguished
from other, superficially similar processes of contact-induced
linguistic change, and under what conditions does it take place?
Are there grammatical morphemes or constructions that are more
easily borrowed than others, and how can language contact account
for areal biases in the borrowing (vs. calquing) of grammatical
formatives? The book is a major contribution to the ongoing
theoretical discussion concerning the relationship between
grammaticalization and language contact on a broad empirical basis.
This book presents a typological survey and analysis of the
co-compound construction. This understudied phenomenon is
essentially a compound whose meaning is the result of coordinating
the meanings of its components, as when in some varieties of
English 'father-mother' denotes 'parents'. During the course of the
book Dr W lchi examines and discusses topics of great theoretical
and linguistic interest. These include the notion of word,
markedness, the syntax and semantics of coordination,
grammaticalization, lexical semantics, the distinction between
compounding and phrase formation, and the constructional meanings
languages can deploy. The book makes many observations and points
about typology and areal features and includes a wealth of
unfamiliar data. It will be invaluable for typologists and of
considerable interest to a variety of specialists including
lexicologists, morphologists, construction grammarians, cognitive
linguists, semanticists, field linguists, and syntacticians.
|
|