Contents - The Neogrammarians
- Structuralism
- Functionalism Generativism
- Sociolinguistics
- Lexical Diffusion
- Grammaticalisation
- Construction grammar
- Other approaches (CAS)
The Neogrammarians - After Darwin
- Group of German grammarians, "Die Junggrammatiker“ (Neogrammarians), proposed a scientific approach to grammar
- They established principles to develop theories and came to certain laws for phonological evolution
- Laws based on observation of phenomena (deductive method)
- This German tendency was later followed by French and English
- Interest for old stages of languages linguistic studies and literary works
Structuralism Saussure was the first structuralist but had been formed as a Neogrammarian He views language as a series of dichotomies Synchrony vs diachrony Functionalism - Structuralism had two tendencies: European and American
- Functionalist approches derive from European structuralism
Sociolinguistics - 1960s: debate about the concept of science and its applicability to
- Social Sciences
- Humanities
- These epistemological discussions led to new ways of interpreting language change and other social phenomena
- Language change, not subject to general/deterministic rules that allow for prediction or induction
- If there are laws these are temporally and culturally constrained
- Nowadays, linguists are concerned with the psychological and sociocultural context
- Sociolinguistics combines language variation and language cange
You will have to find our about Grammaticalisation and Construction Gramar and their explanation for language change Types of change Classically, change is presented as a dichotomy External change vs internal change This distintion was promoted by: - Sociolinguistics (Croft, 2000; Jones & Esch, 2002; Jones & Singh, 2005)
- Genetic Linguistics (Thomason & Kaufman, 1988)
- Principles & Parameters (Briscoe, 2000a, 2000b; Clark & Roberts, 1993; Lightfoot, 1979; Pintzuk, Tsoulas, & Warner, 2000; Yang, 2000)
Sociolinguistics and Genetic Linguistics - internal: languages follow 'natural','normal' and 'regular’ paths of change, according to general principles such as assimilation, analogical extension and analogical levelling (Thomason & Kaufman, 1988: 22pp.; Jones & Singh 2005: 18-19)
OE stanas > PE stones OE sorga > PE sorrows OE naman > PE names ANALOGICAL EXTENSION - external: language contact, i.e. child bilingualism or adult second language learning (L2)
OE hie/heo, him/hira, heom/heora replaced by ON ðeir, ðeim, ðeira BORROWING Principles and Parameters - internal: innate set of parameters that limits the space of possible grammars (Yang, 2000: 232; Clark & Roberts,1993: 340; Biberauer, Holmberg, Roberts, & Sheehan, 2010)
- external: refers to the varying language input during acquisition
Some issues - Sociolinguistics/Genetic Linguistics: Explain what is happening in great detail, but not why it is happening. How do 'internal' causes work, what are the triggering events?
- Principles & Parameters: Universal Grammar (innate) as 'internal' cause is too broad. If it is universal across all languages it does not predict anything specific about language change
- Language as a Complex Adaptive System (CAS):
"The structures of language emerge from interrelated patterns of experience, social interaction, and cognitive mechanisms.” (Beckner et al., 2009) “[...] the traditional distinction between language-external and language-internal causes for linguistic change and evolution may turn out to be of Little interest in the end.” (Bickel, 2013: 13) - The CAS model considers primary (causal) and secondary (relational) predictors rather tan internal/external change
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