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Last update:
8 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Language Contact and Contact Languages

Edited by Peter Siemund and Noemi Kintana
University of Hamburg

2008. x, 358 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 1927 5 / EUR 75.00 / USD 113.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9078 6 / EUR 75.00 / USD 113.00
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This new volume on language contact and contact languages presents cutting-edge research by distinguished scholars in the field as well as by highly talented newcomers. It has two principal aims: to analyze language contact from different perspectives – notably those of language typology, diachronic linguistics, language acquisition and translation studies; and to describe, explain, and elaborate on universal constraints on language contact. The individual chapters offer systematic comparisons of a wealth of contact situations and the book as a whole makes a valuable contribution to deepening our understanding of contact-induced language change. With its broad approach, this work will be welcomed by scholars of many different persuasions.


Table of contents

Introduction. Language contact: Constraints and common paths of contact induced language change
Peter Siemund
Part I. Typology
Inflectional morphology and language contact, with special reference to mixed languages
Bernard Comrie
Contact-induced word order change without word order change
Bernd Heine
Remodeling grammar: Copying, conventionalization, grammaticalization
Lars Johanson
Contact-induced change: The case of the Tamangic languages
Michael Noonan
Total reduplication vs. echo-word formation in language contact situations
Thomas Stolz
Part II. Diachrony
Variability within the French interrogative system: A diachronic perspective
Martin Elsig
Verb-late word order in Old Swedish subordinate clauses: Loan, Ausbau phenomenon, or both?
Steffen Höder and Ludger Zeevart
Contact-induced phonological changes in the Catalan spoken in Barcelona
Conxita Lleó, Susana Cortés and Ariadna Benet
Prepositional aspect constructions in Hiberno-English
Lukas Pietsch
Part III. Acquisition
Acquisition of Basque in successive bilingualism: Data from oral storytelling
Margareta Almgren, Leire Beloki, Itziar Idiazabal and Ibon Manterola
Interrogative inversion in non-standard varieties of English
Michaela Hilbert
Part IV. Translation
Linguistic variation through language contact in translation
Nicole Baumgarten and Demet Özçetin
Empirical studies of translations as a mode of language contact - "explicitness" of lexicogrammatical encoding as a relevant dimension
Erich Steiner