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After a "first wave" of traditional studies on prepositional
accusatives and a "second wave" exploring the typological
dimensions of Differential Object Marking in Bossong's footsteps, a
new line of research is currently introducing new methods,
deepening the level of analysis, and offering new perspectives on
the issue. This volume presents 11 innovative, original
contributions representative of this "third wave" of studies on DOM
in Romance.
This manual is the first comprehensive account of Brazilian
Portuguese linguistics written in English, offering not only
linguists but also historians and social scientists new insights
gained from the intensive research carried out over the last
decades on the linguistic reality of this vast territory. In the 20
overview chapters, internationally renowned experts give detailed
yet concise information on a wide range of language-internal as
well as external synchronic and diachronic topics. Most of this
information is the fruit of large-scale language documentation and
description projects, such as the project on the linguistic norm of
educated speakers (NURC), the project "Grammar of spoken
Portuguese", and the project "Towards a History of Brazilian
Portuguese" (PHPB), among others. Further chapters of high
contemporary interest and relevance include the study of linguistic
policies and psycholinguistics. The manual offers theoretical
insights of general interest, not least since many chapters present
the linguistic data in the light of a combination of formal,
functional, generative and sociolinguistic approaches. This rather
unique feature of the volume is achieved by the double authorship
of some of the relevant chapters, thus bringing together and
synthesizing different perspectives.
This volume compares the evolution and current status of two of the
world's major languages, English and Spanish. Parallel chapters
trace the emergence of Global English and Spanish and their current
status, covering aspects such as language and dialect contact,
language typology, norm development in pluricentric languages, and
identity construction. Case studies look into the use of English
and Spanish on the internet, investigate mixed and alternating
lects, as well as ongoing change in Spanish-speaking minorities in
the US. The volume thus contributes to current theoretical debates
and provides fresh empirical data. While offering an in-depth
treatment of the evolution of English and Spanish to the reader,
this book introduces the driving factors and the effects of the
emergence of world languages in general and is relevant for
researchers and students of sociolinguistics, historical
linguistics, and typology alike.
Basing its approach on the linguistic theories of Eugenio Coseriu,
the study takes a corpus of 30 intensive interviews and examines
them for indications of processes of linguistic creation and
language change in present-day Galician. The emergence of a common
vernacular and its bid for emancipation are described in terms of
the tensions between a dialectal oral tradition and the
interference from contact languages, with the focus of interest
centring around the strategies employed by individuals in using the
language and the relationship between metalanguage and speaking.
The study examines medieval legal text traditions in the South of
France and the Iberian peninsula. It is able to demonstrate that
one of the major impulses in the evolution of an elaborate code for
written Romance-language texts in the 12th and 13th centuries was
the renaissance of Roman law originating in Bologna. The
demonstration takes place from two perspectives, one diachronic,
the other synchronic. The diachronic approach inquires into the way
legal discourse traditions, characterized here in textual,
linguistic, and content terms, find their way into certain areas
and languages. The synchronic approach identifies co-existing
traditions and examines their relationship to one another.
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