Narrog / Heine | The Oxford Handbook of Grammaticalization | Buch | 978-0-19-289585-1 | www.sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 948 Seiten, Format (B × H): 172 mm x 247 mm, Gewicht: 2 g

Narrog / Heine

The Oxford Handbook of Grammaticalization


Erscheinungsjahr 2021
ISBN: 978-0-19-289585-1
Verlag: Oxford University Press

Buch, Englisch, 948 Seiten, Format (B × H): 172 mm x 247 mm, Gewicht: 2 g

ISBN: 978-0-19-289585-1
Verlag: Oxford University Press


This book presents the state of the art in research on grammaticalization, the process by which lexical items acquire grammatical function, grammatical items get additional functions, and grammars are created. Leading scholars from around the world introduce and discuss the core theoretical and methodological bases of grammaticalization, report on work in the field, and point to promising directions for new research. They represent every relevant theoretical perspective and approach.

Research on grammaticalization and its role in linguistic change encompasses work on languages from every major linguistic family. Its results offer valuable insights for all theoretical frameworks, including generative, construction, and cognitive grammar, and relate to work in fields such as phonology, sociolinguistics, and language acquisition. The handbook is divided into five parts, of which the first two are devoted to theory and method, the third and fourth to work in linguistic domains, classes, and cateogories, and the fifth to case studies of grammaticalization in a range of languages. It will be an indispensable source of information and inspiration for all those who wish to know more about this fascinating and important field.

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Weitere Infos & Material


- Acknowledgements

- The Contributors

- Abbreviations

- 1: Heiko Narrog and Bernd Heine: Introduction

- Part I: Grammaticalization and Linguistic Theory

- 2: Elizabeth Closs Traugott: Grammaticalization and Mechanisms of Change

- 3: Olga Fischer: Grammaticalization as Analogically Driven Change

- 4: Elly van Gelderen: Grammaticalization and Generative Grammar: a difficult liaison

- 5: Peter Harder and Kasper Boye: Grammaticalization and Functional Linguistics

- 6: Joan L. Bybee: Usage-based Theory and Grammaticalization

- 7: Ronald W. Langacker: Grammaticalization and Cognitive Grammar

- 8: Nikolas Gisborne and Amanda Patten: Construction Grammaar and Grammaticalization

- 9: Walter Bisang: Grammaticalization and Linguistic Typology

- 10: Terttu Nevalainen and Minna Palander-Collin: Grammaticalization and Sociolinguistics

- 11: Holger Diessel: Grammaticalization and Language Acquisition

- 12: Andrew D. M. Smith: Grammaticalization and Language Evolution

- 13: Östen Dahl: Grammaticalization and Linguistic Complexity

- 14: Kersti Börjars and Nigel Vincent: Grammaticalization and Directionality

- 15: Marianne Mithun: Grammaticalization and Explanation

- 16: Brian D. Joseph: Grammaticalization: A General Critique

- Part II: Methodological Issues

- 17: Shana Poplack: Grammaticalization and Linguistic Variation

- 18: Rena Torres Cacoullos and James A. Walker: Collocations in Grammaticalization and Variation

- 19: Christian Mair: Grammaticalization and Corpus Linguistics

- 20: Helena Raumolin-Brunberg and Arja Nurmi: Grammaticalization and Language Change in the Individual

- 21: Bernd Kortmann and Agnes Schneider: Grammaticalization in Non-Standard Varieties of English

- 22: Yaron Matras: Grammaticalization and Language Contact

- 23: Bernd Heine and Tania Kuteva: The Areal Dimension of Grammaticalization

- 24: Béatrice Lamiroy and Walter De Mulder: Degrees of Grammaticalization Across Languages

- 25: Heiko Narrog and Johan van der Auwera: Grammaticalization and Semantic Maps

- Part III: Domains of Grammaticalization

- 26: Anne Wichmann: Grammaticalization and Prosody

- 27: Martin Haspelmath: The Gradual Coelescence into 'Words' in Grammaticalization

- 28: Ilse Wischer: Grammaticalization and Word Formation

- 29: Scott DeLancey: Grammaticalization and Syntax - A Functional View

- 30: Chaofen Sun and Elizabeth Closs Traugott: Grammaticalization and Word Order Change

- 31: Regine Eckardt: Grammaticalization and Semantic Change

- 32: Steve Nicolle: Pragmatic Aspects of Grammaticalization

- 33: Richard Waltereit: Grammaticalization and Discourse

- 34: Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen: Grammaticalization and Conversation

- 35: Douglas Lightfoot: Grammaticalization and Lexicalization

- 36: Gabriele Diewald: Grammaticalization and Pragmaticalization

- 37: John Haiman: Iconicity Versus Grammaticalization: A Case Study

- 38: Muriel Norde: Degrammaticalization

- Part IV: Grammaticalization of Form Classes and Categories

- 39: Elly van Gelderen: The Grammaticalization of Agreement

- 40: Paolo Ramat: Adverbial Grammaticalization

- 41: Christa König: The Grammaticalization of Adpositions and Case Marking

- 42: Walter De Mulder and Anne Carlier: The Grammaticalization of Definite Articles

- 43: Björn Wiemer: The Grammaticalization of Passives

- 44: Manfred Krug: Auxiliaries and Grammaticalization

- 45: Laurel J. Brinton: The Grammaticalization of Complex Predicates

- 46: Maj-Britt Mosegaard Hansen: Negative Cycles and Grammaticalization

- 47: Kees Hengeveld: The Grammaticalization of Tense and Aspect

- 48: Debra Ziegeler: The Grammaticalization of Modality

- 49: Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald: The Grammaticality of Evidentiality

- 50: Noriko O. Onodera: The Grammaticalization of Discourse Markers

- 51: Zygmunt Frajzyngier: The Grammaticalization of Reference Systems

- 52: Toshio Ohori: The Grammaticalization of Subordination

- 53: Guy Deutscher: The Grammaticalization of Quotatives

- 54: Anna Giacalone Ramat and Caterina Mauri: The Grammaticalization of Coordinating Interclausal Connectives

- 55: Sandra A. Thompson and Ryoko Suzuki: The Grammaticalization of Final Particles

- Part V: The Different Faces of Grammaticalization Across Languages

- 56: Roland Pfau and Markus Steinbach: Grammaticalization in Sign Languages

- 57: Bernd Heine: Grammaticalization in African Languages

- 58: Martin Hilpert: Grammaticalization in Germanic Languages

- 59: Adam Ledgeway: Grammaticalization From Latin to Romance

- 60: Mário Eduardo T. Martelotta and Maria Maura Cezario: Grammaticalization in Brazilian Portuguese

- 61: Björn Wiemer: Grammaticalization in Slavic Languages

- 62: Lars Johanson: Grammaticalization in Turkic Languages

- 63: Seongha Rhee: Grammaticalization in Korean

- 64: Heiko Narrog and Toshio Ohori: Grammaticalization in Japanese

- 65: Hilary Chappell and Alain Peyraube: Grammaticalization in Sinitic Languages

- References

- Name Index

- Language Index

- Subject Index


Heiko Narrog is Professor at the Graduate School of International Cualtural Studies, Tohoku University. He received a PhD in Japanese Studies from the Ruhr University Bochum in 1997, and a PhD in Language Studies from Tokyo University in 2002. His publications inclde Modality in Japanese and the Layered Structure of the Clause (Benjamins, 2009), and Modality, Subjectivity, and Semantic Change: A Cross-Linguistic Perspective (OUP, 2012) as well as numerous articles in linguistic typology, semantics and language change, and Japanese linguistics.

Bernd Heine is Emeritus Professor at the Institute of African Studies and Egyptology, University of Cologne. He has held visiting professorships at universities across the world, and in 2009 received the Lifetime Achievement Award of the Evolutionary Linguistics Association. His many publications include African Languages: An Introduction (CUP, 200), A Linguistic Geography of Africa (CUP, 2008), and the OUP volumes The Changing Languages of Europe (2006) and The Genesis of Grammar: A Reconstruction (2007), both with Tania Kuteva.

Heiko Narrog and Bernd Heine are co-editors of the OUP volumes The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Analysis (2010; second edition 2015) and Grammaticalization from a Typological Perspective (2018), and o-authors of the OUP textbook Grammaticalization (2021).



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