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Showing 1 to 15 of 208 results Save | Export
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Guzy-Sprague, Zoë – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2022
Exploring the Yiddish language of my father, grandmother, her grandmother, and beyond, this autobiographical article frames language as an ever-changing space where identities are negotiated, formed, and contested. Placing the history of Yiddish alongside my own familial relationship to the language, I explore how the stories of individual lives…
Descriptors: Family Relationship, Language Usage, Fathers, Grandparents
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Meisel, Jurgen M. – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2011
The starting hypothesis of the keynote article (KA) is that language acquisition plays an essential role in processes leading to grammatical change. Consequently, a minimal requirement, to be met by explanations of diachronic change is that they rely on mechanisms which are operative in acquisition. The KA is therefore an appeal for…
Descriptors: Language Variation, Diachronic Linguistics, Language Acquisition, Role
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Mufwene, Salikoko S. – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2011
Jurgen Meisel's (JM) article is literally thought-provoking, especially for the issues that one can raise out of the central position that he develops, viz., "although bilingual acquisition in situations of language contact can be argued to be of significant importance for explanations of grammatical change, reanalysis affecting parameter settings…
Descriptors: Language Research, Linguistic Borrowing, Diachronic Linguistics, Ethnography
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Otheguy, Ricardo – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2012
Prepositions can be found with and without adjacent complements in many forms of popular spoken French. The alternation appears in main clauses ("il veut pas payer pour ca [approximately] il veut pas payer pour" "he doesn't want to pay for [it]") and, though with a more restricted social and geographic distribution, in relative…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Foreign Countries, French, Bilingualism
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Sprouse, Rex A. – Second Language Research, 2010
This review article argues that contemporary mainstream second language acquisition research has extremely little, if any, impact on current scholarship in creole linguistics. After a promise of an active synergy between the two subfields 30 years ago, genuine engagement slowed to a virtual stop by the mid-1980s as both fields continued to develop…
Descriptors: Creoles, Second Languages, Second Language Learning, Language Research
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Thomason, Sarah G. – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2011
Jurgen Meisel argues that "grammatical variation...can be described...in terms of parametric variation", and--crucially for his arguments in this paper--that "parameter settings do not change across the lifespan". To this extent he adopts the standard generative view, but he then departs from what he calls "the literature on historical…
Descriptors: Sociocultural Patterns, Diachronic Linguistics, Morphology (Languages), Syntax
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Corballis, Michael C. – Brain and Language, 2010
The mirror system provided a natural platform for the subsequent evolution of language. In nonhuman primates, the system provides for the understanding of biological action, and possibly for imitation, both prerequisites for language. I argue that language evolved from manual gestures, initially as a system of pantomime, but with gestures…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Primatology, Evolution
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Weerman, Fred – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2011
There is a long linguistic tradition in which language change is explained in terms of first language acquisition. In this tradition, children are considered to be the agents of language change, or at least the agents of changes in the underlying grammar. Since the early 1980s, this has been formulated in the (generative) terminology in terms of…
Descriptors: Language Research, Language Variation, Old English, Language Acquisition
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Yokota, Thomas – Educational Perspectives, 2008
In this essay, the author examines the attitudes that people in Hawai'i have about Hawai'i Creole. The author first describes the background of the language and explores educators' views from the 1920s to 1940s about Hawai'i Creole (HC), which was first viewed as the the "Pidgin problem" in Hawai'i. The frustrations expressed by…
Descriptors: Pidgins, Creoles, Language Attitudes, Interviews
Poitou, Jacques – Travaux Neuchatelois de Linguistique (Tranel), 2001
This article focuses on prototypical conceptions and articulation of diachronic change in a language. It examines how linguistic change prototypes can provide a model for researching evolution in a language. (Contains 24 references.) (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, Language Research, Models
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Botha, Rudolf P. – Language & Communication, 2000
Highlights the costly losses that scholars may incur in discussing questions of language evolution outside the framework of a shared, well-articulated linguistic ontology. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, Linguistic Theory, Syntax
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Nevalainen, Terttu – English Today, 1993
Considers how changes in language usage come about and whether such changes can be identified and examined as they occur in a language, focusing on changes in the English language in past centuries and the present day. (MDM)
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, English, Language Usage, Sociolinguistics
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Dressman, Michael R. – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2007
The study of the history of the English language can help students become aware of major issues in several academic fields, including history, literature, political science, anthropology, communication, economics, the Arts, and, of course, languages and linguistics. Even though instructors may not have an especially broad background in the…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Humanities, English, Language Research
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Chen, Matthew Y.; Newman, John – Journal of Chinese Linguistics, 1984
Examines the historical changes affecting the Cantonese "finals." These changes fall into four broad categories: (1) vowel shift, (2) the realignment of Middle Chinese "inner" and "outer" rimes, (3) the genesis of the Cantonese syllable structure restraint, and (4) an assortment of fairly low-level allophonic…
Descriptors: Cantonese, Diachronic Linguistics, Grammar, Phonemics
Amacker, Rene – Travaux Neuchatelois de Linguistique (Tranel), 2001
Of the many Latin texts that provide views on language, and in particular on linguistic change and variation, Varro's "De Lingua Latina" and Gellius'"Noctes Atticae," provide good examples of the perspectives of the stoic philosopher and of the antiquarian philologist. Stoics suggest that language was created as perfect as…
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, Language Variation, Latin, Linguistics
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