An inquiry into unidirectionality as a foundational element of grammaticalization: On the role played by analogy and the synchronic grammar system in processes of language change

Authors
Publication date 2015
Host editors
  • H. De Smet
  • L. Ghesquière
  • F. Van de Velde
Book title On multiple source constructions in language change
ISBN
  • 9789027242679
Series Benjamins Current Topics, 79
Pages (from-to) 43-61
Publisher Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam Center for Language and Communication (ACLC)
Abstract
This paper assumes that in order to explain rather than describe language change, historical linguists should not only consider what happens diachronically at the language output level but also, crucially, what speaker-listeners do at the processing level. The reason for this is that the structure of the language is shaped by the properties of the neurolinguistic mechanism underlying both language use and language learning. It will be argued that analogy as an important principle in grammar formation is the main mechanism in grammaticalization and in change in general when looked at from a processing point of view. The paper discusses the workings of analogy in a number of cases in the history of English which have traditionally been interpreted as unidirectional cases of grammaticalization . It will be shown instead that multiple source constructions were involved, which influenced one another and thus gave direction to the change.
Document type Chapter
Note Published before as: Fischer, O. (2013). An inquiry into unidirectionality as a foundational element of grammaticalization: on the role played by analogy and the synchronic grammar system in processes of language change. --- Studies in Language, 37 --- (3), 515-533
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.79.03fis
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