International audienceLinguistic diffusion is commonly equated with contact, and contrasted with genealogy. This article takes a new perspective, by showing how diffusion lies in fact at the heart of language genealogy itself. Indeed, the Comparative method has taught us to identify genetic subgroups based on sets of shared innovations; but each of these innovations necessarily had to diffuse from speaker to speaker across a network of then mutually intelligible idiolects. Such a diffusionist approach to language genealogy allows us to model language change as it really took place in the social and geographical space of past societies. Crucially, the entangled isoglosses typical of dialect continuums and linkages (Ross 1988) cannot be handl...
The transmission of linguistic change within a speech community is characterized by incremen-tation ...
This volume consists of studies of the relationship between areal diffusion and the genetic developm...
S.J. Greenhill et al. The shape and tempo of language evolution. 2 SUMMARY There are approximately 7...
Linguistic diffusion is commonly equated with contact, and contrasted with genealogy. This article t...
International audienceSince the beginnings of historical linguistics, the family tree has been the m...
Languages of diverse structures and different families tend to share common patterns if they are spo...
Recent research claims that analysis of lexical cognate classes for a basic wordlist can reproduce l...
Linguists have traditionally represented patterns of divergence within a language family in terms of...
International audienceThis study describes and explains the paradox of related languages in contact ...
Languages constantly change, but they also keep traces of the past. We can use these traces to study...
International audienceThere are important reasons to be sceptical of the accuracy and usefulness of ...
About one-fifth of all the world’s languages are spoken in present day Australia, New Guinea, and su...
Traditionally, there are two motivations for an interest in reconstructing the history of language f...
On the human level, social contact gives rise to contradictory impulses: to be more like those we ar...
The region of the ancient Sahul continent (present day Australia and New Guinea, and surrounding isl...
The transmission of linguistic change within a speech community is characterized by incremen-tation ...
This volume consists of studies of the relationship between areal diffusion and the genetic developm...
S.J. Greenhill et al. The shape and tempo of language evolution. 2 SUMMARY There are approximately 7...
Linguistic diffusion is commonly equated with contact, and contrasted with genealogy. This article t...
International audienceSince the beginnings of historical linguistics, the family tree has been the m...
Languages of diverse structures and different families tend to share common patterns if they are spo...
Recent research claims that analysis of lexical cognate classes for a basic wordlist can reproduce l...
Linguists have traditionally represented patterns of divergence within a language family in terms of...
International audienceThis study describes and explains the paradox of related languages in contact ...
Languages constantly change, but they also keep traces of the past. We can use these traces to study...
International audienceThere are important reasons to be sceptical of the accuracy and usefulness of ...
About one-fifth of all the world’s languages are spoken in present day Australia, New Guinea, and su...
Traditionally, there are two motivations for an interest in reconstructing the history of language f...
On the human level, social contact gives rise to contradictory impulses: to be more like those we ar...
The region of the ancient Sahul continent (present day Australia and New Guinea, and surrounding isl...
The transmission of linguistic change within a speech community is characterized by incremen-tation ...
This volume consists of studies of the relationship between areal diffusion and the genetic developm...
S.J. Greenhill et al. The shape and tempo of language evolution. 2 SUMMARY There are approximately 7...