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Historical Linguistics and Language Change

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Historical Linguistics and Language Change Synopsis

Language change happens in the spatio-temporal world. Historical linguistics is the craft linguists exercise upon its results, in order to tell coherent stories about it. In a series of linked essays Roger Lass offers a critical survey of the foundations of the art of historical linguistics, and its interaction with its subject matter, language change. He takes as his background some of the major philosophical issues which arise from these considerations, such as ontology, realism and conventionalism, and explanation. Along the way he poses such questions as: where does our data come from; how trustworthy is it; what is the empirical basis for the reconstructive techniques we standardly take as yielding facts; and how much does the historian create data rather than receiving it? The paradoxical conclusion is that our historiographical methods are often better than the data they have to work with.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780521459242
Publication date: 3rd April 1997
Author: Roger University of Cape Town Lass
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 448 pages
Series: Cambridge Studies in Linguistics
Genres: Dialect, slang and jargon