Essays on time-based linguistic analysis
著者
書誌事項
Essays on time-based linguistic analysis
Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1996
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注記
Collection of previously published material
Includes bibliographical references and index
収録内容
- Variation theory and so-called sociolinguistic grammars
- Theory, description, and what keeps linguistics from becoming a science
- Conceptualizing dialects as implicational constellations rather than as entities bounded by isoglossic bundles
- Reversals in marked categories and contexts, with the pragmatic principle of reading between the lines in the presence of marked usages
- What grammarians haven't been doing right, or, Unriddling analytical paradoxes
- Old and new views on language history and language relationships
- Reconstructing language development: two principles of change
- A note on ξ as "ss" (š:) and a ruki-rule in ancient Greek
- Epilogue on historical linguistics
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The purpose of this volume is to make easily available a representative selection of Charles-James N. Bailey's views on linguistic theory. Several previously published papers have been extensively revised and updated for the collection, which also contains two new chapters. The collection is flanked by a new Prologue and Epilogue, and the whole is preceded by Peter Muhlhausler's Introduction which offers a critical appraisal of Professor Bailey's
contribution to the field.
In the Prologue the author discusses the rationale for a Developmentalist, or time-based, framework for the scientific analysis of languages; in the Epilogue he laborates a new approach to historical linguistics. These initial and final chapters reflect the volume's twofold emphasis on time-based analysis both in descriptive (multi-dialectal) analyses of languages and in historical analysis. For historical analysis Professor Bailey contrasts his approach with the current paradoxical practice of
employing static models that exclude a time parameter - an approach which he characterizes as 'synchronic-idiolectal'. In doing so he offers explanations for matters which have not previously been accounted for in a satisfactory way: why and when languages change, the disruptive effects of language
contact in triggering important kinds of change and the role of markedness in complex changes. Concentrating on the sound system and syntax of English, he presents a time-based model with rules for generating highly complex, multiphased phenomena which have been, until now, impervious to linguistic analysis.
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