3 |
Emergence or Grammaticalization? The Case of Negation in Kata Kolok
|
|
|
|
In: Languages; Volume 7; Issue 1; Pages: 23 (2022)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
4 |
Comparing Iconicity Trade-Offs in Cena and Libras during a Sign Language Production Task
|
|
|
|
In: Languages; Volume 7; Issue 2; Pages: 98 (2022)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
7 |
On the effects of Catalan contact in the variable expression of Spanish future tense: A contrastive study of Alcalá de Henares, Madrid and Palma, Majorca
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
8 |
Sprachgeschichte und Sprachwandel für die Schule: Konzeptionen und Unterrichtsmodelle ; Language history and change for schools: Concepts and teaching models
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
9 |
Analysis of Language Change in Collaborative Instruction Following
|
|
|
|
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2022)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
10 |
Modeling language change in English first names
|
|
|
|
In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 7, No 1 (2022): Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; 5243 ; 2473-8689 (2022)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
16 |
Lexical tectonics: Mapping structural change in patterns of lexification
|
|
|
|
In: ISSN: 0721-9067 ; EISSN: 1613-3706 ; Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03092510 ; Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft, De Gruyter, In press, The future of mapping: New avenues for semantic maps research (2021)
|
|
Abstract:
International audience ; Whether it is based on philological data or on comparative research, historical linguistics accounts for modern words by formulating etymological hypotheses that entail changes both in form and in meaning. One way to represent semantic change is to describe modifications in “patterns of lexification”: a polysemous word, which once lexified senses s1–s2–s3, has evolved so it now encodes s3–s4– s5. Meanings that used to be colexified are now dislexified, and vice versa. Leaning on empirical data from Romance and from Oceanic (Vanuatu), this study proposes a general approach to historical lexicology, by identifying five types of structural innovations: split, merger, competition, shift, and relexification. The theoretical discussion is made easier by using a visual approach to structural change, in the form of diachronic maps. Semantic maps have already proven useful to represent synchronic patterns of lexification, outlining each language’s emic categories against a grid of etic senses. The same principle can be profitably used when analysing lexification patterns in diachrony: lexical change is then viewed as the reconfiguration of sense clusters in a semantic space. Maps help us visualize the “lexical tectonics” at play as words evolve over time, gradually shifting their meaning, gaining or losing semantic territory, colliding with each other, or disappearing forever.
|
|
Keyword:
[SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics; language change; lexical semantics; lexicon; Oceanic languages; semantic change; semantic maps; semiotics; structural linguistics; Vanuatu
|
|
URL: https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03092510
|
|
BASE
|
|
Hide details
|
|
17 |
Buzz or Change: How the Social Network Structure Conditions the Fate of Lexical Innovations on Twitter
|
|
|
|
In: 8th Conference on CMC and Social Media Corpora for the Humanities (CMC-Corpora 2021) ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03426028 ; 8th Conference on CMC and Social Media Corpora for the Humanities (CMC-Corpora 2021), Oct 2021, Nijmegen, Radboud University, Netherlands (2021)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
|
|