Jonas / Whitman / Garrett | Grammatical Change | Buch | 978-0-19-958262-4 | www.sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 400 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 760 g

Jonas / Whitman / Garrett

Grammatical Change

Origins, Nature, Outcomes
Erscheinungsjahr 2011
ISBN: 978-0-19-958262-4
Verlag: OUP Oxford

Origins, Nature, Outcomes

Buch, Englisch, 400 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 760 g

ISBN: 978-0-19-958262-4
Verlag: OUP Oxford


This book advances research on grammatical change and shows the breadth and liveliness of the field. Leading international scholars report and reflect on the latest research into the nature and outcomes of all aspects of syntactic change including grammaticalization, variation, complementation, syntactic movement, determiner-phrase syntax, pronominal systems, case systems, negation, and alignment. The authors deploy a variety of generative frameworks, including
minimalist and optimality theoretic, and bring these to bear on a wide range of languages: among the latter are typologically distinct examples from Germanic, Romance, Slavic, Greek, Korean and Japanese, Austronesian, Celtic, and Nahuatl. They draw on sociolinguistic evidence where appropriate. Taken as a
whole, the volume provides a stimulating overview of key current issues in the investigation of the origins, nature, and outcome of syntactic change.

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Weitere Infos & Material


1: John Whitman, Dianne Jonas, and Andrew Garrett: Introduction
Part 1: Grammaticalization and Directionality of Change
2: Paul Kiparsky: Grammaticalization as Optimization
3: Andrew Garrett: The Historical Syntax Problem: Reanalysis and Directionality
4: Montse Batllori and Francesc Roca: Grammaticalization of ser and estar in Romance
5: David Willis: A Minimalist Approach to Jespersen's Cycle in Welsh
Part 2: Change in the Nominal Domain: Internal and External Factors
6: Uffe Bergeton and Roumyana Pancheva: A New Perspective on the Historical Development of English Intensifiers and Reflexives
7: Gertjan Postma: Language Contact and Linguistic Complexity - The Rise of the Reflexive Pronoun zich in a 15th Century netherlands' Border Dialect
8: Mila Dimitrova-Vulchanova and Valentin Vulchanov: An Article Evolving: The Case of Old Bulgarian
9: Christina Guardiano: Parametric Changes in the History of the Greek Article
10: Paola Chrisma: Triggering Syntactic Change: Inertia and Local Causes in the History of English Genitives
Part 3: Change in the Clausal Domain: Cues, Triggers, and Articulation
11: Eric Haeberli and Susan Pintzuk: Revisting Verb (Projection) Raising in Old English
12: Ans van Kemenade and Tanja Milicev: Syntax and Discourse in Old English and Middle Word Order
13: Brady Clark: Subjects in Early English: Syntactic Change as Gradual Constraint Reranking
14: Ana Maria Martins: Coordination, Gapping, and the Portuguese Inflected Infinitive: The Role of Structural Ambiguity in Syntactic Change
15: John Sundquist: Neg Movement in the History of Norwegian: The Evolution of a Grammatical Virus
Part 4: Morphosyntactic Change and Language Type
16: Jason Haugen: On the Gradual Development of Polysynthesis in Nahuatl
17: Edith Aldridge: Antipassive in Austronesian Alignment Changeg
References
Acknowledgements
Index


Garrett, Andrew
Andrew Garrett (PhD Harvard 1990) is Professor of Linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley, where he also serves as Director of the Survey of California and Other Indian Languages. In historical linguistics he has published on general topics in sound change and morphological change as well as the dialectology, diversification, and prehistory of Yurok (an Algic language of California) and Western Numic (Uto-Aztecan), the dialectology and diachronic syntax of English, and the syntax and morphology of Anatolian, Greek, and Latin.

Jonas, Dianne
Dianne Jonas (PhD Harvard University 1997) is currently replacement professor of English Linguistics at Goethe University, Frankfurt. Her main research interests are comparative Scandinavian syntax, Icelandic and Faroese in particular, syntactic variation and change, and dialect syntax (Shetland Dialect and Norfuk English).

Whitman, John
John Whitman (PhD Harvard 1984) is Professor of Linguistics at Cornell University. He works on structural variation among languages, with a focus on the languages of East Asia: Japanese, Korean, and Chinese, in that order, in addition to a more recent interest in Burmese and Karen languages. Recent projects have been on the syntactic alignment of Old Japanese (with Yuko Yanagida), the structure of applicatives, and the long-vexed question of the word order typology of Old Chinese and proto-Sino-Tibetan (with Redouane Djamouri and Waltraud Paul).

Dianne Jonas (PhD Harvard University 1997) is currently replacement professor of English Linguistics at Goethe University, Frankfurt. Her main research interests are comparative Scandinavian syntax, Icelandic and Faroese in particular, syntactic variation and change, and dialect syntax (Shetland Dialect and Norfuk English).

John Whitman (PhD Harvard 1984) is Professor of Linguistics at Cornell University. He works on structural variation among languages, with a focus on the languages of East Asia: Japanese, Korean, and Chinese, in that order, in addition to a more recent interest in Burmese and Karen languages. Recent projects have been on the syntactic alignment of Old Japanese (with Yuko Yanagida), the structure of applicatives, and the long-vexed question of the word order typology of Old Chinese and
proto-Sino-Tibetan (with Redouane Djamouri and Waltraud Paul).

Andrew Garrett (PhD Harvard 1990) is Professor of Linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley, where he also serves as Director of the Survey of California and Other Indian Languages. In historical linguistics he has published on general topics in sound change and morphological change as well as the dialectology, diversification, and prehistory of Yurok (an Algic language of California) and Western Numic (Uto-Aztecan), the dialectology and diachronic syntax of English, and the syntax
and morphology of Anatolian, Greek, and Latin.



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