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Linguistic diversity in space and time : Linguistic diversity in space and time

معرفی کتاب «Linguistic diversity in space and time : Linguistic diversity in space and time» نوشتهٔ Johanna Nichols; American Council of Learned Societies، منتشرشده توسط نشر The University of Chicago Press در سال 1992. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.

In this ground-breaking book, Johanna Nichols proposes means of describing, comparing, and interpreting linguistic diversity, both genetic and structural, providing the foundations for a theory of diversity based upon population science. This book will interest linguists, archaeologists, and population specialists. "An awe-inspiring book, unequalled in scope, originality, and the range of language data considered."—Anna Siewierska, Linguistics "Fascinating. . . . A brilliant pioneering study."— Journal of Indo-European Studies "A superbly reasoned book."—John A. C. Greppin, Times Literary Supplement Booknews In contrast to cross-linguistic work based on theories of sameness, and its attendant restriction to shallow time depths and inability to draw inferences from diversity, Nichols (Slavic languages, U. of California, Berkeley) proposes means of describing, comparing, and interpreting linguistic diversity,both genetic and structural, and thereby provides the foundations for a theory of diversity based upon population science. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com) Scholars have long sought to discover whether there is a detectable genetic relationship among the world's languages, whether linguistic methods can demonstrate that all of the world's languages evolved from a single "mother tongue". In this book, Johanna Nichols offers original and important material that is likely to change significantly the way this exploration is conducted. For over a century, the comparative method has been the principle analytic tool in the reconstruction of prehistoric languages from which historically attested languages have developed. This method looks for regular laws which govern sound correspondences among the cognate words of related languages. The problem with cross-linguistic work based on theories of sameness is that it is necessarily limited to seeking genetic relatedness and reducing structural variety to types. It is restricted to shallow time depths and cannot draw inferences from diversity. But unless it is fairly well understood in what ways languages may group and differ over great depths of time within a geographical area, speculation about whether a certain isolated shared feature signals a genetic relationship is futile. In this groundbreaking book, Nichols proposes means of describing, comparing, and interpreting linguistic diversity, both genetic and structural, and thereby provides the foundations for a theory of diversity based upon population science. Using a database of 174 languages representing the world's linguistic families and surveying a number of structural features and grammatical categories as well as geographical distribution, Nichols establishes the relative frequencies and markedness of grammatical properties, theirinteraction with each other, their relative diachronic stability, and their correlations with geographical location and type of linguistic area. Maps, tables, appendices, and a reproduction of the sample and database will enable readers to test Nichols's conclusions, explore further hypotheses, expand existing databases, and assign cross-linguistic problems to students. This book will be of critical interest to linguists, archaeologists, population specialists, and anyone interested in ways of classifying mankind Frontmatter List of Illustrations (page vii) List of Tables (page ix) Acknowledgments (page xiii) Note on Transcription and Abbreviations (page xv) 1 Introduction (page 1) 2 Favored and Disfavored Grammatical Patterns (page 45) 3 Correlations between Types (page 97) 4 Correlations of Structural Types with Grammatical Categories (page 116) 5 Diachronic Stability: Genetic and Areal (page 163) 6 A Role of Geography: Structural Affinities between Areas (page 184) 7 Linguistic Diversity: Geographical Distribution (page 231) 8 Diversity and Linguistic Prehistory: Conclusions and Open Questions (page 254) 1 Sample Languages (page 283) 2 Data: Language (by Area) and Structural Features (page 292) 3 Alphabetical List of Languages (page 302) 4 Frequency and Distribution of Voice Systems (page 307) Notes (page 311) References (page 319) Indexes (page 343) "Using a database of 174 languages representing the world's linguistic families and surveying a number of structural features and grammatical categories as well as geographical distribution, Nichols establishes the relative frequencies and markedness of grammatical properties, their interaction with each other, their relative diachronic stability, and their correlations with geographical location and type of linguistic area." "Maps, tables, appendices, and a reproduction of the sample and database will enable readers to test Nichols's conclusions, explore further hypotheses, expand existing databases, and assign cross-linguistic problems to students." "This book will be of critical interest to linguists, archaeologists, population specialists, and anyone interested in ways of classifying mankind."--Jacket In this ground-breaking book, Johanna Nichols proposes means of describing, comparing, and interpreting linguistic diversity, both genetic and structural, providing the foundations for a theory of diversity based upon population science. This book will interest linguists, archaeologists, and population specialists. "An awe-inspiring book, unequalled in scope, originality, and the range of language data considered."—Anna Siewierska, Linguistics "Fascinating. . . . A brilliant pioneering study."—Journal of Indo-European Studies "A superbly reasoned book."—John A. C. Greppin, Times Literary Supplement In this ground-breaking book, Johanna Nichols proposes means of describing, comparing, and interpreting linguistic diversity, both genetic and structural, providing the foundations for a theory of diversity based upon population science. This book will interest linguists, archaeologists, and population specialists. "An awe-inspiring book, unequalled in scope, originality, and the range of language data considered."Anna Siewierska, Linguistics "Fascinating. . . . A brilliant pioneering study." Journal of Indo-European Studies "A superbly reasoned book."John A. C. Greppin, Times Literary Supplement This volume proposes means of describing, comparing, and interpreting linguistic diversity, both genetic and structural, providing the foundations for a theory of diversity based upon popular science. One structural feature in language predicts another, implies its presence, or limits its functional or distributional possibilities.
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