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This book focuses on some of the most important issues in
historical syntax. In a series of close examinations of languages
from old Egyptian to modern Afrikaans, leading scholars present new
work on Afro-Asiatic, Latin and Romance, Germanic, Albanian,
Celtic, Indo-Iranian, and Japanese. The book revolves around the
linked themes of parametric theory and the dynamics of language
change. The former is a key element in the search for explanatory
adequacy in historical syntax: if the notion of imperfect learning,
for example, explains a large element of grammatical change, it is
vital to understand how parameters are set in language acquisition
and how they might have been set differently in previous
generations. The authors test particular hypotheses against data
from different times and places with the aim of understanding the
relationship between language variation and the dynamics of change.
Is it possible, for example, to reconcile the unidirectionality of
change predominantly expressed in the phenomenon of
"grammaticalization," with the multidirectionality predicted by
generativist approaches? In terms of the richness of the data it
examines, the broad range of languages it discusses, and the use it
makes of linguistic theory this is an outstanding book, not least
in the contribution it makes to the understanding of language
change.
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