AbstractWanderwörter are a problematic set of words in historical linguistics. They usually make up a small proportion of the total vocabulary of individual languages, and only a minority of loanwords.They are, however, found frequently in languages from across the world.There is, to our knowledge, no general synthesis of Wanderwörter patterns, causes of exceptionally high borrowing rates for particular lexical items, or estimates of their frequency across language families. Claims about the causes of their spread exist, but have not been widely tested. Nor, despite researchers’ intuitions that Wanderwörter form a distinct type of borrowing, is there a clear demonstration that Wanderwörter are, in fact, different from other loanwords in any...
This handbook article gives an overview of the ways in which borrowing has been studied in different...
In this paper I investigate how different factors can influence the range of grammatical categories ...
Earlier literature has suggested that colexification of terms for ‘tree’, ‘firewood’ and ‘fire’ may ...
Wanderwörter are a problematic set of words in historical linguistics. They usually make up a small ...
AbstractWanderwörter are a problematic set of words in historical linguistics. They usually make up ...
In recent years, linguists have begun to increasingly rely on quantitative phylogenetic approaches t...
Current analyses present lexical borrowing as a pervasive phenomenon in pre-colonial Australia. They...
Why do some languages wither and die, while others prosper and spread? Around the turn of the millen...
Borrowing is said to be a pervasive phenomenon among Australian languages, particularly in the domai...
We compare the etymologies of ethnobiological nomenclature in 130 hunter-gatherer and agriculturist ...
Another major loan component from Non-Pama-Nyungan languages is coverbs, the main semantic element ...
Languages of diverse structures and different families tend to share common patterns if they are spo...
All languages borrow words from other languages. Some languages are more prone to borrowing, while o...
All languages borrow words from other languages. Some languages are more prone to borrowing, while o...
In recent years, linguists have begun to increasingly rely on quantitative phylogenetic approaches t...
This handbook article gives an overview of the ways in which borrowing has been studied in different...
In this paper I investigate how different factors can influence the range of grammatical categories ...
Earlier literature has suggested that colexification of terms for ‘tree’, ‘firewood’ and ‘fire’ may ...
Wanderwörter are a problematic set of words in historical linguistics. They usually make up a small ...
AbstractWanderwörter are a problematic set of words in historical linguistics. They usually make up ...
In recent years, linguists have begun to increasingly rely on quantitative phylogenetic approaches t...
Current analyses present lexical borrowing as a pervasive phenomenon in pre-colonial Australia. They...
Why do some languages wither and die, while others prosper and spread? Around the turn of the millen...
Borrowing is said to be a pervasive phenomenon among Australian languages, particularly in the domai...
We compare the etymologies of ethnobiological nomenclature in 130 hunter-gatherer and agriculturist ...
Another major loan component from Non-Pama-Nyungan languages is coverbs, the main semantic element ...
Languages of diverse structures and different families tend to share common patterns if they are spo...
All languages borrow words from other languages. Some languages are more prone to borrowing, while o...
All languages borrow words from other languages. Some languages are more prone to borrowing, while o...
In recent years, linguists have begun to increasingly rely on quantitative phylogenetic approaches t...
This handbook article gives an overview of the ways in which borrowing has been studied in different...
In this paper I investigate how different factors can influence the range of grammatical categories ...
Earlier literature has suggested that colexification of terms for ‘tree’, ‘firewood’ and ‘fire’ may ...