Asymmetries in overt marking and directionality in semantic change
Matthias Urban | Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Department of Linguistics
This article is a contribution to the long standing issue of identifying directionality in semantic change. Drawing on evidence from a sample of morphologically complex terms in basic vocabulary for 149 globally distributed languages, it is argued that cross-linguistically preferred synchronic relationships of word-formation provide clues to likely directions of diachronic semantic developments. The hypothesis is tested against diachronic data from Indo-Aryan languages, and, in spite of a number of counterexamples, a correlation is found. In addition, it is shown how these data can be applied to semantic reconstruction, and a scenario of semantic change which involves morphological complexity in an early stage of semantic development is sketched.
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Tjuka, Annika, Robert Forkel & Johann-Mattis List
2023. Curating and extending data for language comparison in Concepticon and NoRaRe. Open Research Europe 2 ► pp. 141 ff.
Tjuka, Annika, Robert Forkel & Johann-Mattis List
2023. Curating and extending data for language comparison in Concepticon and NoRaRe. Open Research Europe 2 ► pp. 141 ff.
Urban, Matthias
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Urban, Matthias
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2022. Why is Semantic Change Asymmetric? The Role of Concreteness and Word Frequency and Metaphor and Metonymy. Metaphor and Symbol 37:1 ► pp. 39 ff.
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