Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Notes on Contributors
- In Memoriam
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 Language Change and Diversity at the Crossroads of Historical Linguistics, Language Documentation, and Linguistic Typology
- 2 Using the Acoustic Correlates of Voice Quality as Explanations for the Changes in the Descriptions of Xinkan Glottalized Consonants
- 3 Variation and Change in the Distribution of *-(V)n and *-(V)w in Kaqchikel
- 4 Origins of Metathesis in Batsbi, Part II: Intransitive Verbs
- 5 Some Remarks on Etymological Opacity in Austronesian Languages
- 6 The Relationship between Aquitanian and Basque: Achievements and Challenges of the Comparative Method in a Context of Poor Documentation
- 7 Evidence, New and Old, Against the Late *k(’) > *ch(’) Areal Shift Hypothesis
- 8 Are All Language Isolates Equal? The Case of Mapudungun
- 9 The Historical Linguistics and Archaeology of Ancient North America: “A Linguistic Look” at the Hopewell
- 10 The Lenguas de Bolivia Project: Background and Further Prospects
- 11 The Typology of Grammatical Relations in Tuparian Languages with Special Focus on Akuntsú
- 12 Meskwaki (Algonquian) Evidence against Basic Word Order and Configurational Models of Argument Roles
- 13 The Syntax of Alignment: An Emergentist Typology
- Subject and Scholar Index
- Languages and Linguistic Families Index
1 - Language Change and Diversity at the Crossroads of Historical Linguistics, Language Documentation, and Linguistic Typology
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- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Notes on Contributors
- In Memoriam
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 Language Change and Diversity at the Crossroads of Historical Linguistics, Language Documentation, and Linguistic Typology
- 2 Using the Acoustic Correlates of Voice Quality as Explanations for the Changes in the Descriptions of Xinkan Glottalized Consonants
- 3 Variation and Change in the Distribution of *-(V)n and *-(V)w in Kaqchikel
- 4 Origins of Metathesis in Batsbi, Part II: Intransitive Verbs
- 5 Some Remarks on Etymological Opacity in Austronesian Languages
- 6 The Relationship between Aquitanian and Basque: Achievements and Challenges of the Comparative Method in a Context of Poor Documentation
- 7 Evidence, New and Old, Against the Late *k(’) > *ch(’) Areal Shift Hypothesis
- 8 Are All Language Isolates Equal? The Case of Mapudungun
- 9 The Historical Linguistics and Archaeology of Ancient North America: “A Linguistic Look” at the Hopewell
- 10 The Lenguas de Bolivia Project: Background and Further Prospects
- 11 The Typology of Grammatical Relations in Tuparian Languages with Special Focus on Akuntsú
- 12 Meskwaki (Algonquian) Evidence against Basic Word Order and Configurational Models of Argument Roles
- 13 The Syntax of Alignment: An Emergentist Typology
- Subject and Scholar Index
- Languages and Linguistic Families Index
Summary
Introduction
Language change and linguistic diversity are topics that have long traditions in comparative linguistics. One of the earliest seminal works was Conrad Gessner's 1555 book Mithridate (Gessner et al. 2009), which presented and analyzed data on more than 100 languages known at that time, using the Lord's Prayer and word lists as samples for cross-linguistic comparisons. Central to Gessner's work was his perception of language change and diversity in time and space. His corpora combined languages from ancient and contemporary times that he assumed would reveal how languages diversified from a common ancestor (Hebrew). Furthermore, Gessner invested in the collection and presentation of data about languages from diverse geographical locations, including the poorly attested, recently documented and “exotic” languages of the Orbis noui, that is, the territories of present-day Americas, Oceania, and Eastern Asia, discovered by Portugal and Spain during the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries (Colombat 2008).
Approaches to language change and linguistic diversity have indeed evolved since then, and they have culminated in the development of specific fields of investigation, especially historical linguistics (HL), language documentation (LD), and linguistic typology (LT). This book continues to explore the topics of language change and linguistic diversity, bringing forth contributions highlighting how research on language change and linguistic diversity relies crucially on the innovations, intersections, and mutual contributions of HL, LD, and LT. In this introductory chapter, we highlight scholarly contributions to the investigation of language change and linguistic diversity at the crossroads of these fields, highlighting how language change, diversity, HL, LD, and LT are symbiotically interrelated as part of a widely developed research program that continues to evolve rapidly in Linguistics.
The volume showcases practical and theoretical case studies dealing with language change and linguistic diversity, bringing a key contribution to the field by its focus on a diverse range of languages which have not often been at the center of traditional language change research, and by exploring the junctures between language change, linguistic diversity, and other related topics that draw on primary linguistic fieldwork. The chapters of this volume cover distinct geographical areas and a wide range of theoretical and methodological issues.
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- Information
- Language Change and Linguistic DiversityStudies in Honour of Lyle Campbell, pp. 1 - 18Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2022