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E-book: Language Acquisition and Change: A Morphosyntactic Perspective

  • Format: PDF+DRM
  • Pub. Date: 17-Oct-2013
  • Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780748677993
  • Format - PDF+DRM
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  • This ebook is for personal use only. E-Books are non-refundable.
  • Format: PDF+DRM
  • Pub. Date: 17-Oct-2013
  • Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780748677993

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This is a theory of diachronic change based on studies of language acquisition. This monograph addresses diachronic change of languages in terms of a restructuring of speakers' internal grammatical knowledge. The authors answer questions about the circumstances surrounding grammatical change and attempt to identify causes, constructing a general theory of diachronic change consistent with insights from language acquisition. Historical linguistics commonly invokes the child as the principal agent of change. The authors therefore address the topic against the background of insights gained from extensive research into monolingual and bilingual language acquisition. In view of evidence showing that children are remarkably successful in reconstructing the grammars of their ambient languages, the authors reconsider a number of commonly held explanatory models of language change, including language contact and structural ambiguity in the input. Based on a variety of case studies, the discussion of these topics sheds new light on phenomena of change which have occupied historical linguists since the nineteenth century. In an innovative take on the subject, the authors argue that morphosyntactic change in core areas of grammar, more specifically in grammatical domains referring to parameters of Universal Grammar, typically happens in settings involving second language acquisition. The children acting as causal agents of restructuring are either (child) second language learners themselves or are continuously exposed to the speech of second language speakers of their target languages.
Preface ix
Abbreviations xi
1 Variation and change in languages 1(19)
1.1 Signs of change?
1(2)
1.2 A cognitive perspective on diachronic change
3(10)
1.3 Core properties of morphosyntax
13(5)
Notes
18(2)
2 Language change across the lifespan 20(32)
2.1 Patterns of change in the individual and in the speech community
22(16)
2.2 Subject-clitic inversion and -tu in Quebec French interrogatives
38(11)
2.3 Conclusions
49(1)
Notes
50(2)
3 The child as the locus and agent of grammatical change 52(21)
3.1 The language-learning child as the locus of grammatical change
52(8)
3.2 Transmission failure as the solution of the logical problem of language change?
60(10)
3.3 Conclusions
70(2)
Notes
72(1)
4 Structural ambiguity as a possible trigger of syntactic change 73(23)
4.1 Syntactic ambiguity and diachronic reanalysis
74(7)
4.2 Parametric ambiguity and the loss of V2 in Old French
81(9)
4.3 Parametric ambiguity and triggering experience
90(3)
4.4 Summary and conclusions
93(1)
Notes
94(2)
5 Language contact as a possible trigger of change 96(41)
5.1 Mechanisms of contact-induced syntactic change: Structural borrowing and contact-induced interference
97(17)
5.1.1 Structural borrowing
99(6)
5.1.2 Structural convergence
105(5)
5.1.3 Contact-induced interference/Shift-induced interference
110(4)
5.2 Case studies
114(19)
5.2.1 The verb-second property of Old French
115(9)
5.2.2 The loss of the pro-drop property of Old French
124(9)
5.3 Conclusions
133(2)
Notes
135(2)
6 Acquisition in multilingual settings: Implications for explanations of change 137(29)
6.1 Simultaneous bilingualism
138(13)
6.2 Successive bilingualism
151(6)
6.3 Implications and consequences for historical linguistics
157(7)
Notes
164(2)
7 Towards an explanatory theory of grammatical change 166(18)
7.1 Two perspectives on generational change
167(3)
7.2 Structural ambiguity and language change
170(1)
7.3 Language contact and language change
171(4)
7.4 A reappraisal of the role of LI acquisition in diachronic change
175(1)
7.5 A reappraisal of morphosyntactic change
176(1)
7.6 Conclusions
177(6)
Note
183(1)
8 References 184(16)
Primary sources
184(1)
Secondary sources
185(15)
Index 200
Jurgen Meisel has been Professor of Romance Linguistics at the University of Hamburg for over 30 years. Martin Elsig is research assistant at the Collaborative Research Centre on Multilingualism, University of Hamburg. Esther Rinke is a lecturer at the Department of Romance Languages, University of Hamburg