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E-raamat: Lost in Change: Causes and processes in the loss of grammatical elements and constructions

Edited by (University of Bonn), Edited by (University of Manchester)
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"While research on language change has formulated robust empirical generalisations about processes and motivations underlying the emergence and spread of linguistic elements, their decline and loss is less well understood. So far a systematic investigation into the processes and motivations of decline and loss in language change is lacking. This book is a first step towards remedying this state of affairs. It brings together a varied set of empirical investigations into decline and loss, spanning morphology, syntax and the lexicon, in different languages. Their authors apply diverse methodologies and represent different theoretical approaches. On the basis of this broad span of studies, authors and editors propose generalisations related to decline and loss and assess similarities and differences with processes and motivations of emergence and spread. The book aims to inspire and provide hypotheses for further studies of decline and loss. It will appeal to historical linguists and others interested in language change"--

While research on language change has formulated robust empirical generalisations about processes and motivations underlying the emergence and spread of linguistic elements, their decline and loss is less well understood. So far a systematic investigation into the processes and motivations of decline and loss in language change is lacking. This book is a first step towards remedying this state of affairs. It brings together a varied set of empirical investigations into decline and loss, spanning morphology, syntax and the lexicon, in different languages. Their authors apply diverse methodologies and represent different theoretical approaches. On the basis of this broad span of studies, authors and editors propose generalisations related to decline and loss and assess similarities and differences with processes and motivations of emergence and spread. The book aims to inspire and provide hypotheses for further studies of decline and loss. It will appeal to historical linguists and others interested in language change.
Introduction: Lost in Change 1(20)
Svenja Kranich
Tine Breban
PART I Modelling loss: Description, theory and method
Chapter 1 A typological perspective on the loss of inflection
21(30)
Helen Sims-Williams
Matthew Baerman
Chapter 2 So-adj-a construction as a case of obsolescence in progress
51(24)
Karolina Rudnicka
Chapter 3 The impersonal construction in the texts of Updated Old English
75(26)
Jan Cermak
Chapter 4 Corpus driven identification of lexical bundle obsolescence in Late Modern English
101(30)
Ondrej Tichy
Chapter 5 A constructional account of the loss of the adverse avertive schema in Mandarin Chinese
131(30)
Yueh Hsin Kuo
PART II Motivations and explanations for loss: Language-internal and external factors
Chapter 6 Loss or variation? Functional load in morpho-syntax - Three case studies
161(38)
Alexandra Rehn
Chapter 7 "The next Morning I got a Warrant for the Man and his Wife, but he was fled": Did sociolinguistic factors play a role in the loss of the be-perfect?
199(36)
Marianne Hundt
Chapter 8 On the waning of forms - A corpus-based analysis of decline and loss in adjective amplification
235(26)
Martin Schweinberger
Chapter 9 Decline and loss in the modal domain in recent English
261(30)
Svenja Kranich
Chapter 10 German so-relatives: Lost in grammatical, typological, and sociolinguistic change
291(42)
Luise Kempf
Chapter 11 Loss of object indexation in verbal paradigms of Koic (Tibeto-Burman, Nepal)
333(30)
Dorte Borchers
Index 363