This paper argues that recent proposals to sharply distinguish between language description and comparison are ill-conceived for two reasons. First, comparison is unavoidable and hence an integral part of description. Second, the proposals for a strict separation are based on an unrealistic and anachronistic conception of descriptive categories, assuming that these can be defined in purely distributional terms. Here it is shown that description and comparison make use of, and struggle with, the same kind of empirical evidence; namely, crosslinguistically identifiable properties of grammatical formatives and constructions. If descriptive categories and crosslinguistic comparative concepts did not share such properties, language comparison wo...
Owing to the extremely complex nature of language phenomena, description of a natural language is a ...
Comparison is central to most work in linguistics. But what do linguists compare when they compare l...
A long-standing assumption in linguistic analysis is that different languages and constructions can ...
Here I argue that the distinction between comparative concepts and descriptive categories helps lang...
In this paper, I argue that we need to distinguish carefully between descriptive categories, i.e. ca...
This paper reasserts the fundamental conceptual distinction between language- particular categories ...
This paper reasserts the fundamental conceptual distinction between language- particular categories ...
In this paper, we propose a critical discussion of the rationale for this volume. After a short intr...
This paper reasserts the fundamental conceptual distinction between language- particular categories ...
This paper examines the question of breadth vs. depth of description in theoretical and comparative ...
A recent issue of the journal “Linguistic Typology” contains a number of articles on the usefulness ...
That it is useful to compare language structures may sound trivial, but it has sometimes been regard...
Round & Corbett’s (2020) paper on “comparability and measurement in typological science” is an inter...
In this online talk, I report on some of the conceptual challenges that arise in creating typologica...
Structural categories of grammar (such as clitic, affix, compound, adjective, pronoun, dative, subje...
Owing to the extremely complex nature of language phenomena, description of a natural language is a ...
Comparison is central to most work in linguistics. But what do linguists compare when they compare l...
A long-standing assumption in linguistic analysis is that different languages and constructions can ...
Here I argue that the distinction between comparative concepts and descriptive categories helps lang...
In this paper, I argue that we need to distinguish carefully between descriptive categories, i.e. ca...
This paper reasserts the fundamental conceptual distinction between language- particular categories ...
This paper reasserts the fundamental conceptual distinction between language- particular categories ...
In this paper, we propose a critical discussion of the rationale for this volume. After a short intr...
This paper reasserts the fundamental conceptual distinction between language- particular categories ...
This paper examines the question of breadth vs. depth of description in theoretical and comparative ...
A recent issue of the journal “Linguistic Typology” contains a number of articles on the usefulness ...
That it is useful to compare language structures may sound trivial, but it has sometimes been regard...
Round & Corbett’s (2020) paper on “comparability and measurement in typological science” is an inter...
In this online talk, I report on some of the conceptual challenges that arise in creating typologica...
Structural categories of grammar (such as clitic, affix, compound, adjective, pronoun, dative, subje...
Owing to the extremely complex nature of language phenomena, description of a natural language is a ...
Comparison is central to most work in linguistics. But what do linguists compare when they compare l...
A long-standing assumption in linguistic analysis is that different languages and constructions can ...