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Evolution in Romance Verbal Systems

by Emmanuelle Labeau (Volume editor) Jacques Bres (Volume editor)
©2014 Edited Collection 314 Pages
Series: Sciences pour la communication, Volume 108

Summary

The present book focuses on evolution in the Romance verbal systems. In the wake of Bybee’s and Dahl’s studies, it advocates the benefits of adopting a cross-linguistic and diachronic approach to the study of linguistic phenomena. Within the scope of the Romance family, similar cross-linguistic evolution paths are explored, as related languages at different stages of grammaticalisation may shed light on each other’s developments. A diachronic dimension also proves desirable for several reasons. First, a diachronic approach significantly enhances the explanatory power of linguistic theory by showing how a specific form came to convey a certain function. Second, change is better revealed in diachronic movement than in static synchrony. Third, meaning constantly evolves and a one-off probe will be less revealing than a sustained study through time. Finally and most importantly, similarities across languages appear more obviously in diachrony. All the chapters of this volume participate in their own way to that crosslinguistic and diachronic approach and help make it an original, focused contribution that covers all main Romance languages.

Details

Pages
314
Year
2014
ISBN (PDF)
9783035202335
ISBN (Softcover)
9783034314381
DOI
10.3726/978-3-0352-0233-5
Language
English
Publication date
2013 (December)
Keywords
grammaticalisation linguistic theory change
Published
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2013. 314 pp.

Biographical notes

Emmanuelle Labeau (Volume editor) Jacques Bres (Volume editor)

Emmanuelle Labeau is Senior Lecturer in French language and linguistics at Aston University (Birmingham, UK). She has published extensively on tenses in French and has been the President of the Association for French Language Studies since 2011. Jacques Bres is professor of French Linguistics at Montpellier 3. His research specialisms include verbal tenses and dialogism.

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Title: Evolution in Romance Verbal Systems