Formal Approaches to Celtic Linguistics

Formal Approaches to Celtic Linguistics
Author: Andrew Cairnie
Publsiher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 425
Release: 2011-05-25
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781443830515

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This collection brings together the latest research into the syntax, semantics, phonology, phonetics and morphology of the Celtic languages. Based on presentations given at the Formal Approaches to Celtic Linguistics Conference in 2009, this book contains articles by leading Celtic linguists on Breton, Modern Irish, Old Irish, Scottish Gaelic, and Welsh, on a wide variety of topics ranging from the syntax and semantics of clefts to the articulatory phonology of fortis sonorants.

Formal and Historical Approaches to Celtic Languages

Formal and Historical Approaches to Celtic Languages
Author: Krzysztof Jaskuła
Publsiher: Wydawn. Kul
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2011-01-01
Genre: Celtic languages
ISBN: 8377022958

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The Syntax of the Modern Celtic Languages

The Syntax of the Modern Celtic Languages
Author: Randall Hendrick
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 278
Release: 2020-01-13
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9789004373228

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This volume, one of the few devoted to Celtic syntax, makes an important contribution to the description of Celtic, focusing on the ordering of major constituents, pronouns, inflection, compounding, and iode-switching. The articles also address current issues in linguistic theory so that Celticists and theoretical linguists alike find this book valuable.

Morphosyntactic Variation in Medieval Celtic Languages

Morphosyntactic Variation in Medieval Celtic Languages
Author: Elliott Lash,Fangzhe Qiu,David Stifter
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 431
Release: 2020-10-12
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9783110680799

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This book showcases the state of the art in the corpus-based linguistics of medieval Celtic languages. Its chapters detail theoretical advances in analysing variation/change in the Celtic languages and computational tools necessary to process/analyse the data. Many contributions situate the Celtic material in the broader field of corpus-based diachronic linguistics. The application of computational methods to Celtic languages is in its infancy and this book is a first in medieval Celtic Studies, which has mainly concentrated on philological endeavours such as editorial and literary work. The Celtic languages represent a new frontier in the development of NLP tools because they pose special challenges, like complicated inflectional morphology with non-straightforward mappings between lemmata and attested forms, irregular orthography, and consonant mutations. With so much data available in non-electronic form and ongoing efforts to convert these data to computer-readable format, there is much room for the developing/testing of new tools. This books provides an overview of this process at a crucial time in the development of the field and aims to the data accessible to computational linguists with an interest in diachronic change.

The Celtic Languages

The Celtic Languages
Author: Donald MacAulay
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 492
Release: 1992
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN: 0521231272

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The only modern account to describe all surviving Celtic languages in detail.

Minority Languages Microvariation Minimalism and Meaning

Minority Languages  Microvariation  Minimalism and Meaning
Author: Alison Henry,Catrin Rhys
Publsiher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 307
Release: 2013-10-03
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781443853309

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This volume presents a selection of papers from the first international conference of the Irish Network in Formal Linguistics (INFL). INFL is well placed to attract expertise on both microvariation and the linguistics of the Celtic languages, and the volume reflects this expertise. Microvariation approaches the analysis of dialect variation with a focus on how it contributes to the understanding of linguistic theory. The synchronic and diachronic variation examined in this volume includes Irish English, dialects of Italian and dialects of Flemish. Under the linguistic study of Celtic languages, the papers included address important architectural questions in linguistic theory, as well as challenging some notions with a long history in traditional descriptions of the Celtic languages. The final section brings together papers on topics of current theoretical interest in the formal analysis of syntax, semantics and discourse, including phase theoretic approaches to a range of phenomena involving syntactic conditions on semantic interpretation. The final two papers adopt a formal perspective not to aspects of linguistic structure, but to language use in contexts demonstrating the import of formal micro-level sequential analysis of talk-in-interaction for macro-level questions of communication and social organisation.

An Introduction to the Celtic Languages

An Introduction to the Celtic Languages
Author: Paul Russell
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 366
Release: 2014-07-15
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781317894568

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This text provides a single-volume, single-author general introduction to the Celtic languages. The first half of the book considers the historical background of the language group as a whole. There follows a discussion of the two main sub-groups of Celtic, Goidelic (comprising Irish, Scottish, Gaelic and Manx) and Brittonic (Welsh, Cornish and Breton) together with a detailed survey of one representative from each group, Irish and Welsh. The second half considers a range of linguistic features which are often regarded as characteristic of Celtic: spelling systems, mutations, verbal nouns and word order.

Valency over Time

Valency over Time
Author: Silvia Luraghi,Elisa Roma
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 385
Release: 2021-10-25
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9783110755718

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Valency patterns and valency orientation have been frequent topics of research under different perspectives, often poorly connected. Diachronic studies on these topics is even less systematic than synchronic ones. The papers in this book bring together two strands of research on valency, i.e. the description of valency patterns as worked out in the Leipzig Valency Classes Project (ValPaL), and the assessment of a language's basic valency and its possible orientation. Notably, the ValPaL does not provide diachronic information concerning the valency patterns investigated: one of the aims of the book is to supplement the available data with data from historical stages of languages, in order to make it profitably exploitable for diachronic research. In addition, new research on the diachrony of basic valency and valency alternations can deepen our understanding of mechanisms of language change and of the propensity of languages or language families to exploit different constructional patterns related to transitivity.