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This book aims to provide a better understanding of convergence and
non-convergence phenomena, such as divergence, from different
theoretical perspectives. It brings together nine case studies that
deal with contact between languages found in the Iberian Peninsula
(Castilian, Catalan, Portuguese and Basque), between Spanish or
Portuguese and another language (such as English), and between
different varieties from Europe and other continents. The volume
thus unites views from two fields that rarely interact: contact
linguistics and dialectology. It discusses the mechanisms and
consequences of language contact within the Ibero-Romance world, a
geographical space characterised by a high rate of multilingual
speakers and settings. The contributions deal with various
combinations of convergence and divergence, for example between
different varieties of the same language, language stability
despite contact, as well as less studied aspects, such as the
relation between language contact and second language acquisition,
the linguistic landscape perspective of language contact, and
divergence in linguistic identity construction.
The practice of comparing languages has a long tradition
characterized by a cyclic pattern of interest. Its meeting with
corpus linguistics in the 1990s has led to a new sub-discipline of
corpus-based contrastive studies. The present volume tackles two
main challenges that had not yet been fully addressed in the
literature, namely an empirical assessment of the nature of the
data commonly used in cross-linguistic studies (e.g. translation
data versus comparable data), and the development of advanced
methods and statistical techniques suitably adapted to contrastive
research settings. The papers collected in this volume endeavour to
find out what (new) types of data are most useful for what kind of
contrastive questions, and which advanced statistical techniques
are most suited to deal with the multidimensionality of contrastive
research questions. Answers to these questions are provided through
the contrastive analysis of various language pairs or groups, and a
wide variety of phenomena situated at almost all linguistic levels.
In sum, this book provides an update on new methodological and
theoretical insights in empirical contrastive linguistics and will
stimulate further research within this field.
The practice of comparing languages has a long tradition
characterized by a cyclic pattern of interest. Its meeting with
corpus linguistics in the 1990s has led to a new sub-discipline of
corpus-based contrastive studies. The present volume tackles two
main challenges that had not yet been fully addressed in the
literature, namely an empirical assessment of the nature of the
data commonly used in cross-linguistic studies (e.g. translation
data versus comparable data), and the development of advanced
methods and statistical techniques suitably adapted to contrastive
research settings. The papers collected in this volume endeavour to
find out what (new) types of data are most useful for what kind of
contrastive questions, and which advanced statistical techniques
are most suited to deal with the multidimensionality of contrastive
research questions. Answers to these questions are provided through
the contrastive analysis of various language pairs or groups, and a
wide variety of phenomena situated at almost all linguistic levels.
In sum, this book provides an update on new methodological and
theoretical insights in empirical contrastive linguistics and will
stimulate further research within this field.
The study focuses on the correlations existing between the
conceptual properties of the modalities of visual and auditory
perception and the semantic-syntactic behavior of the verbs of
perception ver/voir, oA-r/entendre, mirar/regarder, and
escuchar/A(c)couter. In part one of the book, the author argues
that visual perception and auditory perception differ in terms of
extra-linguistic criteria. Part two draws upon empirical material
to advance syntactic evidence for a connection between the
cognitive features of visual and auditory perception and the
syntactic behavior of verbs expressing such perception.
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