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Aspects of the Grammar and Lexica of Artificial Languages

by Alan Libert (Author) Christo Moskovsky (Author)
©2011 Monographs X, 180 Pages

Summary

This book treats various areas of the phonetics, orthography, morphology, syntax, and lexica of artificial languages in an effort to determine what features such languages have in common, and how they differ. Among the topics dealt with are affricates, digraphs, stress, plural formation, demonstratives, prepositional case assignment, color terms, terms for beverages, and terms for meteorological phenomena. Data from many artificial languages, gathered from both primary and secondary sources, are presented in an attempt to give a picture of tendencies among them. The comparative examination of the languages considered in this book demonstrates that artificial languages are relatively uniform in some phonological aspects (e.g. nasals and affricates) while they show a considerable degree of variation in relation to some morphological categories (e.g. demonstratives and plurals). With regard to vocabulary from various lexical fields, in addition to the expected differences among a priori languages, different degrees of uniformity were found among a posteriori and mixed languages with respect to lexemes with particular meanings.

Details

Pages
X, 180
Year
2011
ISBN (Hardcover)
9783631596784
Language
English
Keywords
Phonetics Morphology Lexicon Syntax
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2011. X, 180 pp., num. tables

Biographical notes

Alan Libert (Author) Christo Moskovsky (Author)

Alan Reed Libert completed his BA in Greek and Latin at New York University in 1980, and his PhD in linguistics in 1993 at McGill University. He has worked at Newcastle University (Australia) since 1994. He has published on artificial languages before. Christo Moskovsky completed a degree in English Philology and a Master’s in Linguistics at Sofia University. He holds a PhD from Newcastle University (Australia) where he is now a senior lecturer in Linguistics.

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Title: Aspects of the Grammar and Lexica of Artificial Languages