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An Introduction To Historical Linguistics 4th Edition Crowley Terry

  • SKU: BELL-10306628
An Introduction To Historical Linguistics 4th Edition Crowley Terry
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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An Introduction To Historical Linguistics 4th Edition Crowley Terry instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 25.42 MB
Author: Crowley Terry, Bowern Claire.
ISBN: 9780195365542, 0195365542
Language: English
Year: 2010
Edition: 4

Product desciption

An Introduction To Historical Linguistics 4th Edition Crowley Terry by Crowley Terry, Bowern Claire. 9780195365542, 0195365542 instant download after payment.

I would like to think that this book will prove useful to teachers of historical linguistics at all undergraduate levels. I have written it on the assumption that students have already completed at least one basic course in descriptive linguistics, so I have not bothered to define terms such as phoneme, morpheme, or suffix. Some familiarity is also assumed with a distinctive feature analysis of phonology. More specialist linguistic terminology, such as ergative or exclusive pronoun, however, is introduced at its fist appearance in the text in small caps and is always explained (and generally also exemplified) for the benefit of students. The linguistic terminology in this volume is used in the same way as in Crowley, Lynch, Siegel, and Piau, The Design of Language: An Introduction to Descriptive Linguistics.
IntroductionThe Nature of Linguistic Relationships
How and Why Do Languages Change?
Attitudes to Language Change
Types of Sound Change
Lenition and Fortition
Sound Loss
Sound Addition
Metathesis
Fusion, Fission, and Breaking
Assimilation
Dissimilation
Tone Changes
Unusual Sound Changes
Expressing Sound Changes
Writing Rules
Ordering of Changes
Phonetic and Phonemic Change
Phonetic Change without Phonemic Change
Phonetic Change with Phonemic Change
Phonemic Change without Phonetic Change
The Comparative Method (1): Procedures
Sound Correspondences and Reconstruction
An Example of Reconstruction: Proto-Polynesian
Reconstruction of Conditioned Sound Changes
The Reality of Protolanguages
Determining Relatedness
Finding Families
Subgrouping
Shared Innovation and Shared Retention
Long-Distance Relationships
Internal Reconstruction
Using Synchronic Alternations
Internal Reconstruction and Indo-European Laryngeals
Limitations of Internal Reconstruction
Summary: Procedures for Internal Reconstruction
Computational and Statistical Methods
Distance-Based versus Innovation-Based Methods
Lexicostatistics
Criticisms of Lexicostatistics and Glottochronology
Subgrouping Computat

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