Competition and Variation in Natural Languages

Competition and Variation in Natural Languages
Author: Mengistu Amberber,Helen de Hoop
Publsiher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 374
Release: 2005-06-30
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 0080459773

Download Competition and Variation in Natural Languages Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This volume combines different perspectives on case-marking: (1) typological and descriptive approaches of various types and instances of case-marking in the languages of the world as well as comparison with languages that express similar types of relations without morphological case-marking; (2) formal analyses in different theoretical frameworks of the syntactic, semantic, and morphological properties of case-marking; (3) a historical approach of case-marking; (4) a psycholinguistic approach of case-marking. Although there are a number of publications on case related issues, there is no volume such as the present one, which exclusively looks at case marking, competition and variation from a cross-linguistic perspective and within the context of different contemporary theoretical approaches to the study of language. In addition to chapters with broad conceptual orientation, the volume offers detailed empirical studies of case in a number of diverse languages including: Amharic, Basque, Dutch, Hindi, Japanese, Kuuk Thaayorre, Malagasy and Yurakaré. The volume will be of interest to researchers and advanced students in the cognitive sciences, general linguistics, typology, historical linguistics, formal linguistics, and psycholinguistics. The book will interest scholars working within the context of formal syntactic and semantic theories as it provides insight into the properties of case from a cross-linguistic perspective. The book also will be of interest to cognitive scientists interested in the relationship between meaning and grammar, in particular, and the human mind's capacity in the mapping of meaning onto grammar, in general.

Variation Selection Development

Variation  Selection  Development
Author: Regine Eckardt,Gerhard Jäger,Tonjes Veenstra
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter
Total Pages: 417
Release: 2008-08-27
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9783110205398

Download Variation Selection Development Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Can language change be modelled as an evolutionary process? Can notions like variation, selection and competition be fruitfully applied to facts of language development? The present volume ties together various strands of linguistic research which can bring us towards an answer to these questions. In one of the youngest and rapidly growing areas of linguistic research, mathematical models and simulations of competition based developments have been applied to instances of language change. By matching the predicted and observed developmental trends, researchers gauge existing models to the needs of linguistic applications and evaluate the fruitfulness of evolutionary models in linguistics. The present volume confronts these studies with more empirically-based studies in creolization and historical language change which bear on key concepts of evolutionary models. What does it mean for a linguistic construction to survive its competitors? How do the interacting factors in phases of creolization differ from those in ordinary language change, and how - consequently - might Creole languages differ structurally from older languages? Some of the authors, finally, also address the question how different aspects of our linguistic competence tie in with our more elementary cognitive capacities. The volume contains contributions by Brady Clark et al., Elly van Gelderen, Alain Kihm, Manfred Krifka, Wouter Kusters, Robert van Rooij, Anette Rosenbach, John McWhorter, Teresa Satterfield, Michael Tomasello and Elizabeth C. Traugott. The book brings together contributions from two areas of research: the study of language evolution by means of methods from artifical intelligence/artificial life (like computer simulations and analytic mathematical methods) on the one hand, and empirically oriented research from historical linguistics and creolisation studies that uses concepts from evolutionary theory as a heuristic tool in a qualitative way. The book is thus interesting for readers from both traditions because it supplies them with information about relevant ongoing research and useful methods and data from the other camp.

Transitivity

Transitivity
Author: Patrick Brandt,Marco García García
Publsiher: John Benjamins Publishing
Total Pages: 318
Release: 2010-11-17
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9789027287816

Download Transitivity Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

What happens when a canonically transitive form meets a canonically transitive meaning, and what happens when this doesn’t happen? How do dyadic forms relate to monadic ones, and what are the entailments of the operations that the grammar uses to relate one to the other? Collecting original expert work from acquisition, processing, typological and theoretical syntax-semantics research, this volume provides a state of the art as well as cutting edge discussion of central issues in the realm of Transitivity. These include the definition and role of "Natural Transitivity", the interpretation and repercussions of valency changing operations and differential case marking, and the interactions between (in)transitive Gestalts in different categories and at different levels of representation.

Differential Subject Marking

Differential Subject Marking
Author: Helen de Hoop,Peter de Swart
Publsiher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 313
Release: 2007-12-04
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781402064975

Download Differential Subject Marking Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Not all sentences encode their subjects in the same way. Some languages overtly mark some subjects depending on certain features of the subject argument or the sentence in which the subject figures. This is known as Differential Subject Marking (DSM). Containing illuminating discussions of DSM from languages all over the world, this book shows that DSM is often the result of interactions between conflicting constraints on language use.

The Linguistic Cycle Language Change and the Language Faculty

The Linguistic Cycle   Language Change and the Language Faculty
Author: Department of English Arizona State University Elly van Gelderen Regents' Professor
Publsiher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 461
Release: 2011-04-08
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780199857630

Download The Linguistic Cycle Language Change and the Language Faculty Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Elly van Gelderen provides examples of linguistic cycles from a number of languages and language families, along with an account of the linguistic cycle in terms of minimalist economy principles. A cycle involves grammaticalization from lexical to functional category followed by renewal. Some well-known cycles involve negatives, where full negative phrases are reanalyzed as words and affixes and are then renewed by full phrases again. Verbal agreement is another example: full pronouns are reanalyzed as agreement markers and are renewed again. Each chapter provides data on a separate cycle from a myriad of languages. Van Gelderen argues that the cross-linguistic similarities can be seen as Economy Principles present in the initial cognitive system or Universal Grammar. She further claims that some of the cycles can be used to classify a language as analytic or synthetic, and she provides insight into the shape of the earliest human language and how it evolved.

Iconicity in Cognition and across Semiotic Systems

Iconicity in Cognition and across Semiotic Systems
Author: Sara Lenninger,Olga Fischer,Christina Ljungberg,Elżbieta Tabakowska
Publsiher: John Benjamins Publishing Company
Total Pages: 423
Release: 2022-11-15
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9789027257574

Download Iconicity in Cognition and across Semiotic Systems Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This volume investigates iconicity as to both comprehension and production of meaning in language, gesture, pictures, art and literature. It highlights iconic processes in meaning-making and interpretation across different semiotic systems at structurally, historically and pragmatically different levels of iconicity, with special focus on Cognitive Semiotics. Exploring the ubiquity of iconicity in verbal, visual and gestural communication, these contributions discuss it from the point of view of human meaning-making, examined as a phenomenon that is experienced, embodied and often polysemiotic in nature.

Language Evolution

Language Evolution
Author: Salikoko S. Mufwene
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 371
Release: 2008-03-31
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781441175359

Download Language Evolution Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Languages are constantly changing. New words are added to the English language every year, either borrowed or coined, and there is often railing against the 'decline' of the language by public figures. Some languages, such as French and Finnish, have academies to protect them against foreign imports. Yet languages are species-like constructs, which evolve naturally over time. Migration, imperialism, and globalization have blurred boundaries between many of them, producing new ones (such as creoles) and driving some to extinction. This book examines the processes by which languages change, from the macroecological perspective of competition and natural selection. In a series of chapters, Salikoko Mufwene examines such themes as: - natural selection in language - the actuation question and the invisible hand that drives evolution - multilingualism and language contact - language birth and language death - the emergence of Creoles and Pidgins - the varying impacts of colonization and globalization on language vitality This comprehensive examination of the organic evolution of language will be essential reading for graduate and senior undergraduate students, and for researchers on the social dynamics of language variation and change, language vitality and death, and even the origins of linguistic diversity.

Mechanisms of Language Acquisition

Mechanisms of Language Acquisition
Author: Brian MacWhinney
Publsiher: Psychology Press
Total Pages: 591
Release: 2014-02-04
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781317757399

Download Mechanisms of Language Acquisition Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

First published in 1987. Three decades of intensive study of language development have led to an enormous accumulation of descriptive data. But there is still no over-arching theory of language development that can make orderly sense of this huge stockpile of observations. Grand structuralist theories such as those of Chomsky, Jakobson, and Piaget have kept researchers asking the right questions, but they seldom allow us to make detailed experimental predictions or to formulate detailed accounts. The papers collected in this volume attempt to address this gap between data and theory by formulating a series of mechanistic accounts of the acquisition of language.