Languages vary widely in many ways, including their canonical word order. A basic aspect of the observed variation is the fact that some word orders are much more common than others. Although this regularity has been recognized for some time, it has not been well-explained. In this paper we offer an informationtheoretic explanation for the observed word-order distribution across languages, based on the concept of Uniform Information Density (UID). We suggest thatobject-first languages are particularly disfavored because they are highly nonoptimal if the goal is to distribute information content approximately evenly throughout a sentence, and that the rest of the observed word-order distribution is at least partially explainable in terms of ...
Ever since the publication of Greenberg 1963, word order typologists have attempted to formulate and...
This chapter examines the question of what limits there are in the way in which languages can diffe...
Languages vary widely but not without limit. The central goal of linguistics is to describe the dive...
Languages employ different strategies to transmit structural and grammatical information. While, for...
The universal properties of human languages have been the subject of intense study across the langua...
Many of the world's languages display a preferred ordering of subject, object and verb, known as tha...
Languages employ different strategies to transmit structural and grammatical information. While, for...
The uniform information density (UID) hypothesis posits a preference among language users for uttera...
Please do not cite or quote without permission 4025 words The distribution of word orders across lan...
Background The language faculty is probably the most distinctive feature of our species, and endows...
Recent work in comparative linguistics suggests that all, or almost all, attested human languages ma...
As is the case of many signals produced by complex systems, language presents a statistical structu...
The present paper discusses the benefits and challenges of token-based typology, which takes into ac...
In this paper, I propose a novel account of word order variation and word order change in terms of c...
Natural language is a remarkable example of a complex dynamical system which combines variation and ...
Ever since the publication of Greenberg 1963, word order typologists have attempted to formulate and...
This chapter examines the question of what limits there are in the way in which languages can diffe...
Languages vary widely but not without limit. The central goal of linguistics is to describe the dive...
Languages employ different strategies to transmit structural and grammatical information. While, for...
The universal properties of human languages have been the subject of intense study across the langua...
Many of the world's languages display a preferred ordering of subject, object and verb, known as tha...
Languages employ different strategies to transmit structural and grammatical information. While, for...
The uniform information density (UID) hypothesis posits a preference among language users for uttera...
Please do not cite or quote without permission 4025 words The distribution of word orders across lan...
Background The language faculty is probably the most distinctive feature of our species, and endows...
Recent work in comparative linguistics suggests that all, or almost all, attested human languages ma...
As is the case of many signals produced by complex systems, language presents a statistical structu...
The present paper discusses the benefits and challenges of token-based typology, which takes into ac...
In this paper, I propose a novel account of word order variation and word order change in terms of c...
Natural language is a remarkable example of a complex dynamical system which combines variation and ...
Ever since the publication of Greenberg 1963, word order typologists have attempted to formulate and...
This chapter examines the question of what limits there are in the way in which languages can diffe...
Languages vary widely but not without limit. The central goal of linguistics is to describe the dive...