27 Languages as dynamic systems: How grammar can emerge
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Marianne Mithun
Abstract
The value of traditional languages as repositories of culture is well recognized: they embody the codification of patterns of thought passed from generation to generation. Many grammatical distinctions recur in languages around the globe, but others are richly developed only in some. The differences are no accident. They emerge out of what speakers choose to say the most often in everyday speech. Frequently-recurring turns of phrase can become routinized; words within them may lose their individual salience, erode in form, and gain more abstract meanings. Differences in vocabulary are also no accident. Speakers create terms for concepts they consider nameworthy. Languages indigenous to North America provide excellent examples of both processes. Understanding them brings home the fact that languages are not simply interchangeable: each represents a history, stretching over millennia, of what speakers have chosen to say the most often.
Abstract
The value of traditional languages as repositories of culture is well recognized: they embody the codification of patterns of thought passed from generation to generation. Many grammatical distinctions recur in languages around the globe, but others are richly developed only in some. The differences are no accident. They emerge out of what speakers choose to say the most often in everyday speech. Frequently-recurring turns of phrase can become routinized; words within them may lose their individual salience, erode in form, and gain more abstract meanings. Differences in vocabulary are also no accident. Speakers create terms for concepts they consider nameworthy. Languages indigenous to North America provide excellent examples of both processes. Understanding them brings home the fact that languages are not simply interchangeable: each represents a history, stretching over millennia, of what speakers have chosen to say the most often.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Preface V
- Table of contents VII
- List of North American families, languages, and dialects XIII
- Maps XLI
-
I Sounds and sound structure
- 1 Acoustic phonetics 1
- 2 Articulatory phonetics 39
- 3 Tone 63
- 4 Segmental phonology 89
- 5 Prosodic morphology 109
- 6 Word prosody 135
- 7 Prosody beyond the word 155
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II Words
- 8 What is a word? 183
- 9 Word classes 205
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III Sentences
- 10 Syntax within the clause 247
- 11 Negatives 267
- 12 Questions and requests in North American languages 283
- 13 Information structure 305
- 14 Clause-combining: Relative clauses 323
- 15 Clause combining: Syntax of subordination and complementation 345
- 16 Switch-reference and event cohesion 363
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IV Discourse
- 17 Verbal art 385
- 18 Conversation structure 421
-
V Meaning
- 19 Lexicalization and lexical meaning 453
- 20 Lexicography 479
- 21 Evidentiality 497
- 22 Pluractionality and distributivity 511
- 23 Mass and count nouns 527
- 24 Sense of place: Space, landscape, and orientation 547
- 25 A sense of time and world 577
- 26 Pragmatics 599
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VI Languages over space and time
- 27 Languages as dynamic systems: How grammar can emerge 619
- 28 Language contact and linguistic areas 647
- 29 Language classification 669
- 30 Archival-based sociolinguistic variation 689
- 31 Community-based sociolinguistic variation 701
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Preface V
- Table of contents VII
- List of North American families, languages, and dialects XIII
- Maps XLI
-
I Sounds and sound structure
- 1 Acoustic phonetics 1
- 2 Articulatory phonetics 39
- 3 Tone 63
- 4 Segmental phonology 89
- 5 Prosodic morphology 109
- 6 Word prosody 135
- 7 Prosody beyond the word 155
-
II Words
- 8 What is a word? 183
- 9 Word classes 205
-
III Sentences
- 10 Syntax within the clause 247
- 11 Negatives 267
- 12 Questions and requests in North American languages 283
- 13 Information structure 305
- 14 Clause-combining: Relative clauses 323
- 15 Clause combining: Syntax of subordination and complementation 345
- 16 Switch-reference and event cohesion 363
-
IV Discourse
- 17 Verbal art 385
- 18 Conversation structure 421
-
V Meaning
- 19 Lexicalization and lexical meaning 453
- 20 Lexicography 479
- 21 Evidentiality 497
- 22 Pluractionality and distributivity 511
- 23 Mass and count nouns 527
- 24 Sense of place: Space, landscape, and orientation 547
- 25 A sense of time and world 577
- 26 Pragmatics 599
-
VI Languages over space and time
- 27 Languages as dynamic systems: How grammar can emerge 619
- 28 Language contact and linguistic areas 647
- 29 Language classification 669
- 30 Archival-based sociolinguistic variation 689
- 31 Community-based sociolinguistic variation 701