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- Language Change and Linguistic Theory: Volume I: Approaches, Methodology, and Sound Change, Volume II: Morphological, Syntactic, and Typological Change
Language Change and Linguistic Theory: Volume I: Approaches, Methodology, and Sound Change, Volume II: Morphological, Syntactic, and Typological Change
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Keywords: change, volume, morphological, typological, sound, syntactic, approaches, linguistic, theory, language, methodology
Number of Pages: 1152
Published: 2010-10-15
List price: $325.00
ISBN-10: 0199590214
ISBN-13: 9780199590216
Book Description:
Volume I examines topics involving change in different components of the grammar from the perspectives of theory, acquisition, variation, and motivation. Gary Miller investigates traditional concerns, such as variation and lexical diffusion, and considers their impact on contemporary issues. He discusses the interaction of articulatory and perceptual factors, the implications of naturalness for expected changes, and the consequences of alterations of syllable timing for contemporary theory. The volume closes with a description of and motivations for vowel shifts.
In Volume II, the focus turns to morphological and syntactic language changes. By most theoretical accounts, morphology is not autonomous, but interacts with at least three other domains: (i) phonology and perception, (ii) the lexicon / culture, and (iii) syntax. Having addressed the first of these extensively in Volume I, Gary Miller illustrates the second with the rise of the feminine gender in Indo-European, and the third by documentation of the changes from Latin to Romance in the coding of reflexive, anticausative, middle, and passive. He shows how syntactic change is (micro)parametric and is typically motivated by changes in lexical features, including the numerous shifts from lexical to functional content as well as changes within functional categories. Finally, he considers the genesis of creole inflectional, derivational, and syntactic categories, involving the interaction of contact phenomena with morphological and syntactic change.
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