Syntactic change in contact is generally explained as a result of cognitive, structural/typological, or sociolinguistic factors. However, the relative weight of these factors in shaping the outputs of contact is yet to be assessed. In this paper, we propose a microcontact approach to the study of change in contact, focusing on microsyntactic points of variation across multiple language pairs that are structurally very close. We show that this approach makes it possible to more accurately identify some of the factors that are involved in change. By considering three case studies centered on the syntax of subjects, objects, and indexicals, we show that the outputs of syntactic change in microcontact diverge from what is expected under ...
Language change as a result of language contact is studied in many different ways using a number of ...
Linguists have long been reluctant to posit a link between the structure of the grammar of a languag...
thanks to Li Wei for encouraging us to do this special issue, to Carol Pfaff and Tonjes Veenstra for...
Syntactic change in contact is generally explained as a result of cognitive, structural/typological,...
This book brings together papers that discuss social and structural aspects of language contact and ...
Languages can be similar in many ways - they can resemble each other in categories, constructions an...
This volume deals with some never before described morphosyntactic variations and changes appearing ...
Sustained academic interest in contact-induced language change goes back at least to the late ninete...
The article focuses on the hypothesis that the structural complexity of languages is variable and hi...
Many principles of structural borrowing have been proposed, all under qualitative theories. Some arg...
This publication is an important contribution to language contact theory. Taking a typological persp...
This volume is at cross-roads between two research traditions dealing with language change: contact ...
This study asks whether and how the features that define a language variety co-vary within the commu...
The phenomena described in this paper ideally represent the convergence of two apparently distant fi...
This volume collects novel contributions to comparative generative linguistics that “rethink” existi...
Language change as a result of language contact is studied in many different ways using a number of ...
Linguists have long been reluctant to posit a link between the structure of the grammar of a languag...
thanks to Li Wei for encouraging us to do this special issue, to Carol Pfaff and Tonjes Veenstra for...
Syntactic change in contact is generally explained as a result of cognitive, structural/typological,...
This book brings together papers that discuss social and structural aspects of language contact and ...
Languages can be similar in many ways - they can resemble each other in categories, constructions an...
This volume deals with some never before described morphosyntactic variations and changes appearing ...
Sustained academic interest in contact-induced language change goes back at least to the late ninete...
The article focuses on the hypothesis that the structural complexity of languages is variable and hi...
Many principles of structural borrowing have been proposed, all under qualitative theories. Some arg...
This publication is an important contribution to language contact theory. Taking a typological persp...
This volume is at cross-roads between two research traditions dealing with language change: contact ...
This study asks whether and how the features that define a language variety co-vary within the commu...
The phenomena described in this paper ideally represent the convergence of two apparently distant fi...
This volume collects novel contributions to comparative generative linguistics that “rethink” existi...
Language change as a result of language contact is studied in many different ways using a number of ...
Linguists have long been reluctant to posit a link between the structure of the grammar of a languag...
thanks to Li Wei for encouraging us to do this special issue, to Carol Pfaff and Tonjes Veenstra for...