Cross-linguistic research is not easy because one needs to examine languages of diverse structures, but here I argue that typological classification is never “difficult”. The literature contains many references to such difficulties, but in fact, the main practical difficulty is obtaining complete data for a wide range of languages. And of course, one needs to find the right questions to ask if one wants to get interesting answers; but this is not a “difficulty” – it is the primary challenge o..
Editors’ preface Research into Language Typology poses two intriguing and related challenges to ...
This article tackles a question raised by one of the founding figures of lexical typology, Stephen U...
At the end of last year, I designed an inquiry about the present state of linguistic typology in the...
It is often assumed that the goal of typology is to define the notion ‘possible human language’. Thi...
none1noIn this paper, I will discuss ambiguity among languages not as a communicative property, but ...
In this paper, I argue that we need to distinguish carefully between descriptive categories, i.e. ca...
1. Introduction We claim that making sense of the typological diversity of languages demands a histo...
The goal of this article is twofold: to present a brief overview of differences and similarities bet...
Michael Daniel, in his chapter 'Linguistic typology and the study of language' in The Oxford Handboo...
What is linguistic typology? The term linguistic typology refers to studying, examining, classifying...
Language comparison was long restricted to the question of phylogenetic inheritance (e.g. Bopp 1816;...
For some time in the field of typology there has been debate about the nature of the categories or c...
Linguistic typology aims to capture structural and semantic variation across the world’s languages. ...
Typological classification is the process of describing the various linguistic types found across la...
pursuing one of the same goals as generative grammar: to determine the limits of pos-sible human lan...
Editors’ preface Research into Language Typology poses two intriguing and related challenges to ...
This article tackles a question raised by one of the founding figures of lexical typology, Stephen U...
At the end of last year, I designed an inquiry about the present state of linguistic typology in the...
It is often assumed that the goal of typology is to define the notion ‘possible human language’. Thi...
none1noIn this paper, I will discuss ambiguity among languages not as a communicative property, but ...
In this paper, I argue that we need to distinguish carefully between descriptive categories, i.e. ca...
1. Introduction We claim that making sense of the typological diversity of languages demands a histo...
The goal of this article is twofold: to present a brief overview of differences and similarities bet...
Michael Daniel, in his chapter 'Linguistic typology and the study of language' in The Oxford Handboo...
What is linguistic typology? The term linguistic typology refers to studying, examining, classifying...
Language comparison was long restricted to the question of phylogenetic inheritance (e.g. Bopp 1816;...
For some time in the field of typology there has been debate about the nature of the categories or c...
Linguistic typology aims to capture structural and semantic variation across the world’s languages. ...
Typological classification is the process of describing the various linguistic types found across la...
pursuing one of the same goals as generative grammar: to determine the limits of pos-sible human lan...
Editors’ preface Research into Language Typology poses two intriguing and related challenges to ...
This article tackles a question raised by one of the founding figures of lexical typology, Stephen U...
At the end of last year, I designed an inquiry about the present state of linguistic typology in the...