Editors’ preface Research into Language Typology poses two intriguing and related challenges to the linguist. One the one hand there is the challenge of isolating empirical data that either at long last seem to fill an inexplicable gap in what is commonly thought natural languages should be like, or that conversely call into question hitherto household assumptions about natural language behaviour. This is where elation often results as easily from a chance discovery, from a brief but gratefully received flash of lucidity, or from painstaking and laborious efforts. On the other hand, there is the task of demonstrating how the new findings fit into a pattern or take up a position that does not weaken our grip on the notion of lang...
Whoever might think that ‘language typology is language typology, generative grammar is generative g...
Gibbon D. FORMAL IS NATURAL: TOWARD AN ECOLOGICAL PHONOLOGY. POZNAN STUDIES IN CONTEMPORARY LINGUIST...
Michael Daniel, in his chapter 'Linguistic typology and the study of language' in The Oxford Handboo...
pursuing one of the same goals as generative grammar: to determine the limits of pos-sible human lan...
This article tackles a question raised by one of the founding figures of lexical typology, Stephen U...
It is often assumed that the goal of typology is to define the notion ‘possible human language’. Thi...
What is linguistic typology? The term linguistic typology refers to studying, examining, classifying...
The goal of this article is twofold: to present a brief overview of differences and similarities bet...
Linguistic typology aims to capture structural and semantic variation across the world’s languages. ...
Linguistic typology is the branch of linguistics dealing with the study and classification of langua...
This paper briefly surveys several conceptions of naturalness in phonology, touching primarily on ty...
Linguists are increasingly turning to approaches that say that language has no phonology per se, bu...
Phonology is the study of sound patterns of the world’s languages. In all spoken languages, we find ...
Linguistic typology identifies both how languages vary and what they all have in common. This Handbo...
I discuss the relation between language typology and historical linguistics. After briefly illustrat...
Whoever might think that ‘language typology is language typology, generative grammar is generative g...
Gibbon D. FORMAL IS NATURAL: TOWARD AN ECOLOGICAL PHONOLOGY. POZNAN STUDIES IN CONTEMPORARY LINGUIST...
Michael Daniel, in his chapter 'Linguistic typology and the study of language' in The Oxford Handboo...
pursuing one of the same goals as generative grammar: to determine the limits of pos-sible human lan...
This article tackles a question raised by one of the founding figures of lexical typology, Stephen U...
It is often assumed that the goal of typology is to define the notion ‘possible human language’. Thi...
What is linguistic typology? The term linguistic typology refers to studying, examining, classifying...
The goal of this article is twofold: to present a brief overview of differences and similarities bet...
Linguistic typology aims to capture structural and semantic variation across the world’s languages. ...
Linguistic typology is the branch of linguistics dealing with the study and classification of langua...
This paper briefly surveys several conceptions of naturalness in phonology, touching primarily on ty...
Linguists are increasingly turning to approaches that say that language has no phonology per se, bu...
Phonology is the study of sound patterns of the world’s languages. In all spoken languages, we find ...
Linguistic typology identifies both how languages vary and what they all have in common. This Handbo...
I discuss the relation between language typology and historical linguistics. After briefly illustrat...
Whoever might think that ‘language typology is language typology, generative grammar is generative g...
Gibbon D. FORMAL IS NATURAL: TOWARD AN ECOLOGICAL PHONOLOGY. POZNAN STUDIES IN CONTEMPORARY LINGUIST...
Michael Daniel, in his chapter 'Linguistic typology and the study of language' in The Oxford Handboo...