Constructions and Language Change

Constructions and Language Change
Author: Alexander Bergs,Gabriele Diewald
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter
Total Pages: 281
Release: 2008-11-03
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9783110211757

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Studies in diachronic linguistics increasingly acknowledge that linguistic change is highly context-dependent and somehow tied to constructions as linguistic units. This is the first volume to investigate the role of constructions and the potential of constructional approaches in linguistic change. The contributions in this volume comprise both theoretical and empirical studies, all of which are accessible for a general audience. While some contributions explicitly aim at comparing and unifying concepts from both traditional grammatical theories and recent construction grammar approaches, others offer detailed case studies of exemplary problems from a constructional point of view. The papers offer a cross-linguistic perspective and deal with a number of different language families, ranging from Germanic to Austronesian.

Constructionalization and Constructional Changes

Constructionalization and Constructional Changes
Author: Elizabeth Closs Traugott,Graeme Trousdale
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 299
Release: 2013-11
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780199679898

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This book develops an approach to language change based on construction grammar in order to reconceptualize grammaticalization and lexicalization. The authors show that language change proceeds by micro-steps involving every aspect of grammar including pragmatics and discourse functions. A new and productive approach to historical linguistics.

On Multiple Source Constructions in Language Change

On Multiple Source Constructions in Language Change
Author: Hendrik De Smet,Lobke Ghesquière,Freek Van de Velde
Publsiher: John Benjamins Publishing Company
Total Pages: 227
Release: 2015-11-15
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9789027268006

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In much writing on language change, there is a tacit assumption that change operates on a single source construction to produce an innovative target construction. This volume challenges this assumption, by showing that many changes involve interactions between multiple source constructions. In fact, the involvement of multiple source constructions is unexceptional. The phenomenon is observed in phonology, morphology, syntax and semantics. It is seen in language-internal change as well as in contact-induced change. Interactions may obtain between independent but historically related constructions as well as between historically unrelated constructions. The contributions to this volume, on the one hand, present specific case studies on changes involving multiple source constructions, in various domains of grammar and in a variety of languages. On the other hand, they discuss how such changes can be accommodated in current theoretical models of language. Originally published in Studies in Language Vol. 37:3 (2013).

Germanic Future Constructions

Germanic Future Constructions
Author: Martin Hilpert
Publsiher: John Benjamins Publishing
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2008
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9789027218292

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This study offers a Construction Grammar approach to the historical development and modern usage of future constructions in English, German, Dutch, Danish, and Swedish. On the basis of corpus data, constructions such as English be going to or German werden are analyzed as symbolic units that convey a range of temporal and modal meanings. A special focus lies on the main verbs that occur with these constructions. Statistical co-occurrence patterns between constructions and lexical items guide the semantic analyses in this study: It is argued that a construction that conventionally occurs with main verbs such as write or speak differs functionally from a construction that typically occurs with verbs such as rain or increase. The same approach is also applied historically: If a construction co-occurs with different main verbs at subsequent stages in time, this is seen as a sign of semantic change.

Category Change from a Constructional Perspective

Category Change from a Constructional Perspective
Author: Kristel Van Goethem,Muriel Norde,Evie Coussé,Gudrun Vanderbauwhede
Publsiher: John Benjamins Publishing Company
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2018-03-15
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9789027264350

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Category change, broadly defined as the shift from one word class to another, is often studied as part of other changes, such as grammaticalization or lexicalization, but not in its own right. This volume offers a survey of different types of category change and their properties, e.g. abrupt versus gradual changes, morphological versus syntactic changes, or context-independent versus context-sensitive changes. The purpose of this collection of papers is to explore the concepts of linguistic category and category change from the perspective of Construction Grammar. Using data from a variety of languages, the authors address a number of themes that are central to current theorizing about category change, such as the question of whether or not categories should be considered discrete entities, how new categories arise, or whether category change can be considered as the emergence of a new construction, i.e. a new form-meaning pairing. The novel approach advanced in this volume will be of interest to historical linguists as well as to general linguists working on the nature of linguistic categories.

Diachronic Construction Grammar

Diachronic Construction Grammar
Author: Jóhanna Barðdal,Elena Smirnova,Lotte Sommerer,Spike Gildea
Publsiher: John Benjamins Publishing Company
Total Pages: 263
Release: 2015-07-15
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9789027268617

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Construction Grammar as a framework offers a new perspective on traditional historical questions in diachronic linguistics and language change: how do new constructions arise, how should competition in diachronic variation be accounted for, how do constructions fall into disuse, and how do constructions change in general, formally and/or semantically, and with what implications for the language system as a whole? This volume offers a broad introduction to the confluence of Construction Grammar and historical syntax, and also detailed case studies of various instances of syntactic change modeled within Construction Grammar. The volume demonstrates that Construction Grammar as a theory is particularly well suited for modeling historical changes in morphosyntax, and it also documents challenging new phenomena that require a theoretical account within any competing framework of syntactic change.

Constructions in Contact 2

Constructions in Contact 2
Author: Hans C. Boas,Steffen Höder
Publsiher: John Benjamins Publishing Company
Total Pages: 447
Release: 2021-06-15
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9789027259974

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The last few years have seen a steadily increasing interest in constructional approaches to language contact. This volume builds on previous constructionist work, in particular Diasystematic Construction Grammar (DCxG) and the volume Constructions in Contact (2018) and extends its methodology and insights in three major ways. First, it presents new constructional research on a wide range of language contact scenarios including Afrikaans, American Sign Language, English, French, Malayalam, Norwegian, Spanish, Welsh, as well as contact scenarios that involve typologically different languages. Second, it also addresses other types of scenarios that do not fall into the classic language contact category, such as multilingual practices and language acquisition as emerging multilingualism. Third, it aims to integrate constructionist views on language contact and multilingualism with other approaches that focus on structural, social, and cognitive aspects. The volume demonstrates that Construction Grammar is a framework particularly well suited for analyzing a wide variety of language contact phenomena from a usage-based perspective.

Give Constructions across Languages

Give Constructions across Languages
Author: Myriam Bouveret
Publsiher: John Benjamins Publishing Company
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2021-03-15
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9789027260154

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This cognitive contrastive study of ten languages (Chinese, Dalabon, English, French, Spanish, Romanian, Kurdish, Khmer, Polish, Tibetan) focuses on the concept of giving from six main points of view, namely argument structure, lexical semantics and event structure, role marking in the three argument construction and in other constructions, lexicalization, grammaticalization and constructionalization of the verb from a cognitive construction grammar point of view, and central and extended meanings. It is proposed that a continuum approach to grammar and lexicon is needed in order to describe the typological and historical facts. The volume argues for a concrete and abstract transfer ‘cluster model’ involving coverage of lexical and grammatical extension or bleaching phenomena and that the semantic extensions (metaphorical and otherwise) exploit various portions of this schema. The volume is deeply anchored in the Cognitive Construction Grammar theoretical movement, and proposes analyses of constructional phenomena to illustrate a grammar to lexicon continuum, in synchrony and diachrony: language change, grammaticalization chains, constructionalization analysis, and an invariant hypothesis of giving as a basic activity in human cognition.