Historical linguistics: an introduction
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Edinburgh
Edinburgh Univ. Press
2006
|
Ausgabe: | 2. ed., reprint. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXII, 448 S. Kt. |
ISBN: | 0748619054 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
List of Tables ix
List of Figures and Maps xii
Preface xiii
Acknowledgements xvii
Phonetic Symbols and Conventions xix
Phonetic Symbols Chart xxi
1 Introduction 1
1.1 Introduction 1
1.2 What is Historical Linguistics About? 4
1.3 Kinds of Linguistic Changes: An English Example 6
1.4 Exercises 10
2 Sound Change 16
2.1 Introduction 16
2.2 Kinds of Sound Change 17
2.3 Non phonemic (Allophonic) Changes 19
2.4 Phonemic Changes 20
2.5 Sporadic Changes 27
2.6 General Kinds of Sound Changes 27
2.7 Kinds of Common Sound Changes 33
2.8 Relative Chronology 46
2.9 Chain Shifts 47
2.10 Exercises 52
3 Borrowing 62
3.1 Introduction 62
3.2 What is a Loanword? 63
3.3 Why do Languages Borrow from One Another? 64
3.4 How do Words get Borrowed? 65
Contents
3.5 How do we Identify Loanwords and Determine the
Direction of Borrowing? 69
3.6 Loans as Clues to Linguistic Changes in the Past 74
3.7 What Can Be Borrowed? 77
3.8 Cultural Inferences 82
3.9 Exercises 84
4 Analogical Change 103
4.1 Introduction 103
4.2 Proportional Analogy 104
4.3 Analogical Levelling 106
4.4 Analogical Extension 108
4.5 The Relationship between Analogy and Sound Change 109
4.6 Analogical Models 111
4.7 Other Kinds of Analogy 113
4.8 Exercises 120
5 The Comparative Method and
Linguistic Reconstruction 122
5.1 Introduction 122
5.2 The Comparative Method Up Close and Personal 125
5.3 A Case Study 147
5.4 Indo European and the Regularity of Sound Change 155
5.5 Basic Assumptions of the Comparative Method 164
5.6 How Realistic are Reconstructed Proto languages? 166
5.7 Exercises 167
6 Linguistic Classification 184
6.1 Introduction 184
6.2 The World s Language Families 184
6.3 Terminology 186
6.4 How to Draw Family Trees: Subgrouping 188
6.5 Glottochronology (Lexicostatistics) 200
6.6 Exercises 210
7 Models of Linguistic Change 211
7.1 Introduction 211
7.2 The Family tree Model 211
7.3 The Challenge from Dialectology and the
Wave Theory 212
7.4 Dialectology (Linguistic Geography,
Dialect Geography) 215
vi
Contents
7.5 A Framework for Investigating the Causes of
Linguistic Change 218
7.6 Sociolinguistics and Language Change 219
7.7 The Issue of Lexical Diffusion 222
8 Internal Reconstruction 225
8.1 Introduction 225
8.2 Internal Reconstruction Illustrated 225
8.3 Relative Chronology 229
8.4 The Limitations of Internal Reconstruction 238
8.5 Internal Reconstruction and the Comparative Method 240
8.6 Exercises 242
9 Semantic Change and Lexical Change 252
9.1 Introduction 252
9.2 Traditional Considerations 254
9.3 Attempts to Explain Semantic Change 266
9.4 Other Kinds of Lexical Change New Words 272
9.5 Exercises 280
10 Syntactic Change 283
10.1 Introduction 283
10.2 Mechanisms of Syntactic Change 283
10.3 Generative Approaches 289
10.4 Grammaticalization 292
10.5 Syntactic Reconstruction 297
10.6 Exercises 306
11 Explaining Linguistic Change 312
11.1 Introduction 312
11.2 Early Theories 313
11.3 Internal and External Causes 316
11.4 Interaction of Causal Factors 317
11.5 Explanation and Prediction 326
12 Areal Linguistics 330
12.1 Introduction 330
12.2 Defining the Concept 330
12.3 Examples of Linguistic Areas 331
12.4 How to Determine Linguistic Areas 338
12.5 Implications of Areal Linguistics for Linguistic
Reconstruction and Subgrouping 340
vii
Contents
12.6 Areal Linguistics and Proposals of Distant
Genetic Relationship 342
13 Distant Genetic Relationship 344
13.1 Introduction 344
13.2 Lexical Comparison 347
13.3 Sound Correspondences 348
13.4 Grammatical Evidence 350
13.5 Borrowing 352
13.6 Semantic Constraints 353
13.7 Onomatopoeia 353
13.8 Nursery Forms 354
13.9 Short Forms and Unmatched Segments 355
13.10 Chance Similarities 355
13.11 Sound Meaning Isomorphism 356
13.12 Only Linguistic Evidence 356
13.13 Erroneous Morphological Analysis 357
13.14 Non cognates 357
13.15 Spurious Forms 359
13.16 Methodological Wrap up 359
14 Philology: The Role of Written Records 361
14.1 Introduction 361
14.2 Philology 361
14.3 Examples of What Philology Can Contribute 362
14.4 The Role of Writing 367
14.5 Getting Historical Linguistic Information for
Written Sources 369
14.6 Exercises 373
15 Linguistic Prehistory 378
15.1 Introduction 378
15.2 Indo European Linguistic Prehistory 379
15.3 The Methods of Linguistic Prehistory 393
15.4 Limitations and Cautions 418
Bibliography 421
Language Index 436
Name Index 442
Subject Index AAA
viii
List of Tables
Table 2.1 Sanskrit Latin cognates showing Sanskrit merger
of e, o, a a 21
Table 2.2 Historical derivation of mouse , mice , foot , feet 23
Table 2.3 Grassmann s Law and its interaction with other
Greek changes 31
Table 2.4 Grimm s Law in English, Spanish and French
comparisons 50
Table 4.1 Latin rhotacism and the interaction of analogy with
sound change 110
Table 5.1 Some Romance cognate sets 125
Table 5.2 Kaqchikel English comparisons 128
Table 5.3 Some additional Romance cognate sets 136
Table 5.4 Further Romance cognate sets 138
Table 5.5 Some Mayan cognate sets 139
Table 5.6 Central Algonquian sound correspondences and
Bloomfield s reconstruction 141
Table 5.7 Nootkan correspondences involving nasals 146
Table 5.8 Some Finno Ugric cognate sets 148
Table 5.9 Indo European cognates reflecting Grimm s Law 156
Table 5.10 Exceptions to Grimm s Law in consonant clusters 160
Table 5.11 Examples illustrating Verner s Law 162
Table 5.12 Examples contrasting the effects of Grimm s Law
and Verner s Law on medial consonants 163
Table 5.13 Verner s Law in grammatical alternations 163
ix
List of Tables
Table 6.1 Distribution of language families in the world 184
Table 6.2 Some of the better known language families 185
Table 6.3 Some Nootkan sound correspondences 199
Table 8.1 Internal reconstruction and derivation of Tojolabal k 228
Table 8.2 Internal reconstruction and derivation of Nahuatl
roots with initial i 229
Table 8.3 Finnish internal reconstruction 230
Table 8.4 Derivation showing Finnish relative chronology 231
Table 8.5 Hypothetical derivation of Finnish with the
wrong relative chronology 231
Table 8.6 Derivation showing loss of intervocalic s in
Classical Greek 232
Table 8.7 Derivation showing t to s before i in Classical Greek 233
Table 8.8 Hypothetical derivation showing wrong
chronological order in Classical Greek 233
Table 8.9 Derivation showing the correct chronological order
in Classical Greek 233
Table 8.10 Derivation for Hypothesis I for Classical Greek
vein 235
Table 8.11 Derivation for Hypothesis II for Classical Greek
vein 235
Table 8.12 Derivation of *aithiop Ethiopian in Hypothesis II 236
Table 8.13 Internal reconstruction of Classical Greek
nominative singular forms 237
Table 8.14 Historical derivation of mouse , mice , goose ,
geese 240
Table 8.15 Comparison of Balto Finnic leg forms after
internal reconstruction 242
Table 8.16 Comparison of Balto Finnic leg forms before
internal reconstruction 242
Table 10.1 Derivation of whom in Grammari 289
Table 10.2 Derivation of who(m) in Grammar^ 290
Table 10.3 Derivation of who in Gramma^ 290
Table 10.4 Balto Finnic comparative verbal morphology 302
Table 10.5 Comparison of Balto Finnic with forms 303
Table 11.1 Estonian verb forms after certain sound changes 319
Table 12.1 Nootkan sound correspondences 341
x
List of Tables
Table 13.1 Forms of the verb to be in some Indo European
languages 351
Table 14.1 Contrastive h and x in Classical Yucatec Maya 363
Table 14.2 The origin of Huastec labialized velars 364
xi
List of Figures and Maps
Figure 2.1 The Great Vowel Shift in English 52
Figure 5.1 Proto Romance family tree (and genealogy of
Spanish) 124
Figure 6.1 The Indo European family tree 190
Figure 6.2 The Uralic family tree 192
Figure 6.3 The Austronesian family tree 193
Figure 6.4 Mayan Subgrouping 194
Map 3.1 Diffusion of the velar palatalization rule in 80
K ichean languages
Map 7.1 Geographical distribution of words which retained
Ik] in areas of Normandy 214
Map 7.2 Some major dialect areas in the USA 216
Map 11.1 Distribution of the names for rooster in the
southwest of France 323
Map 15.1 The Uralic languages 395
Map 15.2 The Uto Aztecan homeland 403
Map 15.3 Distribution of place names of Scandinavian origin
in England 416
xii
|
adam_txt |
Contents
List of Tables ix
List of Figures and Maps xii
Preface xiii
Acknowledgements xvii
Phonetic Symbols and Conventions xix
Phonetic Symbols Chart xxi
1 Introduction 1
1.1 Introduction 1
1.2 What is Historical Linguistics About? 4
1.3 Kinds of Linguistic Changes: An English Example 6
1.4 Exercises 10
2 Sound Change 16
2.1 Introduction 16
2.2 Kinds of Sound Change 17
2.3 Non phonemic (Allophonic) Changes 19
2.4 Phonemic Changes 20
2.5 Sporadic Changes 27
2.6 General Kinds of Sound Changes 27
2.7 Kinds of Common Sound Changes 33
2.8 Relative Chronology 46
2.9 Chain Shifts 47
2.10 Exercises 52
3 Borrowing 62
3.1 Introduction 62
3.2 What is a Loanword? 63
3.3 Why do Languages Borrow from One Another? 64
3.4 How do Words get Borrowed? 65
Contents
3.5 How do we Identify Loanwords and Determine the
Direction of Borrowing? 69
3.6 Loans as Clues to Linguistic Changes in the Past 74
3.7 What Can Be Borrowed? 77
3.8 Cultural Inferences 82
3.9 Exercises 84
4 Analogical Change 103
4.1 Introduction 103
4.2 Proportional Analogy 104
4.3 Analogical Levelling 106
4.4 Analogical Extension 108
4.5 The Relationship between Analogy and Sound Change 109
4.6 Analogical Models 111
4.7 Other Kinds of Analogy 113
4.8 Exercises 120
5 The Comparative Method and
Linguistic Reconstruction 122
5.1 Introduction 122
5.2 The Comparative Method Up Close and Personal 125
5.3 A Case Study 147
5.4 Indo European and the Regularity of Sound Change 155
5.5 Basic Assumptions of the Comparative Method 164
5.6 How Realistic are Reconstructed Proto languages? 166
5.7 Exercises 167
6 Linguistic Classification 184
6.1 Introduction 184 \
6.2 The World's Language Families 184
6.3 Terminology 186
6.4 How to Draw Family Trees: Subgrouping 188
6.5 Glottochronology (Lexicostatistics) 200
6.6 Exercises 210
7 Models of Linguistic Change 211
7.1 Introduction 211
7.2 The Family tree Model 211
7.3 The Challenge from Dialectology and the
'Wave Theory' 212
7.4 Dialectology (Linguistic Geography,
Dialect Geography) 215
vi
Contents
7.5 A Framework for Investigating the Causes of
Linguistic Change 218
7.6 Sociolinguistics and Language Change 219
7.7 The Issue of Lexical Diffusion 222
8 Internal Reconstruction 225
8.1 Introduction 225
8.2 Internal Reconstruction Illustrated 225
8.3 Relative Chronology 229
8.4 The Limitations of Internal Reconstruction 238
8.5 Internal Reconstruction and the Comparative Method 240
8.6 Exercises 242
9 Semantic Change and Lexical Change 252
9.1 Introduction 252
9.2 Traditional Considerations 254
9.3 Attempts to Explain Semantic Change 266
9.4 Other Kinds of Lexical Change New Words 272
9.5 Exercises 280
10 Syntactic Change 283
10.1 Introduction 283
10.2 Mechanisms of Syntactic Change 283
10.3 Generative Approaches 289
10.4 Grammaticalization 292
10.5 Syntactic Reconstruction 297
10.6 Exercises 306
11 Explaining Linguistic Change 312
11.1 Introduction 312
11.2 Early Theories 313
11.3 Internal and External Causes 316
11.4 Interaction of Causal Factors 317
11.5 Explanation and Prediction 326
12 Areal Linguistics 330
12.1 Introduction 330
12.2 Defining the Concept 330
12.3 Examples of Linguistic Areas 331
12.4 How to Determine Linguistic Areas 338
12.5 Implications of Areal Linguistics for Linguistic
Reconstruction and Subgrouping 340
vii
Contents
12.6 Areal Linguistics and Proposals of Distant
Genetic Relationship 342
13 Distant Genetic Relationship 344
13.1 Introduction 344
13.2 Lexical Comparison 347
13.3 Sound Correspondences 348
13.4 Grammatical Evidence 350
13.5 Borrowing 352
13.6 Semantic Constraints 353
13.7 Onomatopoeia 353
13.8 Nursery Forms 354
13.9 Short Forms and Unmatched Segments 355
13.10 Chance Similarities 355
13.11 Sound Meaning Isomorphism 356
13.12 Only Linguistic Evidence 356
13.13 Erroneous Morphological Analysis 357
13.14 Non cognates 357
13.15 Spurious Forms 359
13.16 Methodological Wrap up 359
14 Philology: The Role of Written Records 361
14.1 Introduction 361
14.2 Philology 361
14.3 Examples of What Philology Can Contribute 362
14.4 The Role of Writing 367
14.5 Getting Historical Linguistic Information for
Written Sources 369
14.6 Exercises 373
15 Linguistic Prehistory 378
15.1 Introduction 378
15.2 Indo European Linguistic Prehistory 379
15.3 The Methods of Linguistic Prehistory 393
15.4 Limitations and Cautions 418
Bibliography 421
Language Index 436
Name Index 442
Subject Index AAA
viii
List of Tables
Table 2.1 Sanskrit Latin cognates showing Sanskrit merger
of e, o, a a 21
Table 2.2 Historical derivation of 'mouse', 'mice', 'foot', 'feet' 23
Table 2.3 Grassmann's Law and its interaction with other
Greek changes 31
Table 2.4 Grimm's Law in English, Spanish and French
comparisons 50
Table 4.1 Latin rhotacism and the interaction of analogy with
sound change 110
Table 5.1 Some Romance cognate sets 125
Table 5.2 Kaqchikel English comparisons 128
Table 5.3 Some additional Romance cognate sets 136
Table 5.4 Further Romance cognate sets 138
Table 5.5 Some Mayan cognate sets 139
Table 5.6 Central Algonquian sound correspondences and
Bloomfield's reconstruction 141
Table 5.7 Nootkan correspondences involving nasals 146
Table 5.8 Some Finno Ugric cognate sets 148
Table 5.9 Indo European cognates reflecting Grimm's Law 156
Table 5.10 Exceptions to Grimm's Law in consonant clusters 160
Table 5.11 Examples illustrating Verner's Law 162
Table 5.12 Examples contrasting the effects of Grimm's Law
and Verner's Law on medial consonants 163
Table 5.13 Verner's Law in grammatical alternations 163
ix
List of Tables
Table 6.1 Distribution of language families in the world 184
Table 6.2 Some of the better known language families 185
Table 6.3 Some Nootkan sound correspondences 199
Table 8.1 Internal reconstruction and derivation of Tojolabal k 228
Table 8.2 Internal reconstruction and derivation of Nahuatl
roots with initial i 229
Table 8.3 Finnish internal reconstruction 230
Table 8.4 Derivation showing Finnish relative chronology 231
Table 8.5 Hypothetical derivation of Finnish with the
wrong relative chronology 231
Table 8.6 Derivation showing loss of intervocalic s in
Classical Greek 232
Table 8.7 Derivation showing t to s before i in Classical Greek 233
Table 8.8 Hypothetical derivation showing wrong
chronological order in Classical Greek 233
Table 8.9 Derivation showing the correct chronological order
in Classical Greek 233
Table 8.10 Derivation for Hypothesis I for Classical Greek
'vein' 235
Table 8.11 Derivation for Hypothesis II for Classical Greek
'vein' 235
Table 8.12 Derivation of *aithiop 'Ethiopian' in Hypothesis II 236
Table 8.13 Internal reconstruction of Classical Greek
'nominative singular' forms 237
Table 8.14 Historical derivation of 'mouse', 'mice', 'goose',
'geese' 240
Table 8.15 Comparison of Balto Finnic 'leg' forms after
internal reconstruction 242
Table 8.16 Comparison of Balto Finnic 'leg' forms before
internal reconstruction 242
Table 10.1 Derivation of whom in Grammari 289
Table 10.2 Derivation of who(m) in Grammar^ 290
Table 10.3 Derivation of who in Gramma^ 290
Table 10.4 Balto Finnic comparative verbal morphology 302
Table 10.5 Comparison of Balto Finnic 'with' forms 303
Table 11.1 Estonian verb forms after certain sound changes 319
Table 12.1 Nootkan sound correspondences 341
x
List of Tables
Table 13.1 Forms of the verb 'to be' in some Indo European
languages 351
Table 14.1 Contrastive h and x in Classical Yucatec Maya 363
Table 14.2 The origin of Huastec labialized velars 364
xi
List of Figures and Maps
Figure 2.1 The Great Vowel Shift in English 52
Figure 5.1 Proto Romance family tree (and genealogy of
Spanish) 124
Figure 6.1 The Indo European family tree 190
Figure 6.2 The Uralic family tree 192
Figure 6.3 The Austronesian family tree 193
Figure 6.4 Mayan Subgrouping 194
Map 3.1 Diffusion of the velar palatalization rule in 80
K'ichean languages
Map 7.1 Geographical distribution of words which retained
Ik] in areas of Normandy 214
Map 7.2 Some major dialect areas in the USA 216
Map 11.1 Distribution of the names for 'rooster' in the
southwest of France 323
Map 15.1 The Uralic languages 395
Map 15.2 The Uto Aztecan homeland 403
Map 15.3 Distribution of place names of Scandinavian origin
in England 416
xii |
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spelling | Campbell, Lyle 1942- Verfasser (DE-588)105713497X aut Historical linguistics an introduction Lyle Campbell 2. ed., reprint. Edinburgh Edinburgh Univ. Press 2006 XXII, 448 S. Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Historische Sprachwissenschaft (DE-588)4127276-6 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content Historische Sprachwissenschaft (DE-588)4127276-6 s DE-604 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015083009&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
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title | Historical linguistics an introduction |
title_auth | Historical linguistics an introduction |
title_exact_search | Historical linguistics an introduction |
title_exact_search_txtP | Historical linguistics an introduction |
title_full | Historical linguistics an introduction Lyle Campbell |
title_fullStr | Historical linguistics an introduction Lyle Campbell |
title_full_unstemmed | Historical linguistics an introduction Lyle Campbell |
title_short | Historical linguistics |
title_sort | historical linguistics an introduction |
title_sub | an introduction |
topic | Historische Sprachwissenschaft (DE-588)4127276-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Historische Sprachwissenschaft Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015083009&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT campbelllyle historicallinguisticsanintroduction |