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Books in the Publications of the Philological Society series

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  • - A Minimalist Approach
    by Adam (University of Cambridge) Ledgeway
    £21.99

    aeo Offers a valuable insight into the little studied syntax of the dialects of southern Italy. aeo Makes a significant contribution towards cataloguing the linguistic typology of dialect syntax within the Italian peninsula, bridging the gap between the familiar data of standard Romance and those of lesser known Romance varieties.

  • - A Dynamic Approach to Bantu Clause Structure
    by Hannah Gibson
    £21.99

    Building Meaning in Context: A Dynamic Approach to Bantu Clause Structure uses the tools of the Dynamic Syntax framework to explore morphosyntactic phenomena in a number of Bantu languages.* Examines word order alternations, inversion constructions and negation in Bantu, showing the incremental nature of the build-up of meaning in context* Highlights cross-linguistic parallels, drawing on data from Japanese, Korean, Romance languages and varieties of Greek* Offers a radical new perspective on the nature of human language, showing the centrality of the concepts of underspecification and update which lie at the heart of the DS structure building process* An innovative analysis with a broad empirical coverage

  • - A Critical Approach
    by James Costa
    £21.99

    Revitalising Language in Provence: A Critical Approach questions the concept of language revitalisation and challenges the field s main tenets through a detailed analysis Southern France s Provencal movement, one of Europe s longest standing language revitalisation projects.

  • by Robert (University of Cambridge Crellin
    £21.99

    The Syntax and Semantics of the Perfect Active in Literary Koine Greek incorporates linguistic insights from both neo-Davidsonian and Chomskyan traditions to present a unified semantic description of the perfect and pluperfect in literary Koine Greek.

  • - A Sociolinguistic Perspective on Royal Style and Identity
    by Mel (University of Birmingham Evans
    £21.99

    The Language of Queen Elizabeth I presents one of the first diachronic accounts of the language the idiolect of the Tudor monarch who ruled England and Ireland from 1558-1603.

  • by Nicola (University of Nottingham McLelland
    £21.99

    Germanist and linguist Nicola McLelland presents an accessible yet scholarly exploration that makes sense of Schottelius's lengthy and unwieldy study by interpreting its elements from grammar to riddles, from verse to dialogue against European discourse traditions that shaped the linguist's views of language.

  • - A Diachronic Approach
    by Kathryn (University College London Allan
    £21.99

    The way in which we understand the concept of intelligence is rooted in metaphor and metonymy. This book explores the motivation for some of the lexemes in this semantic field across the history of the English language, considering the range of cognitive mechanisms and cultural factors that can inform metaphorical and metonymical mappings.

  • by Patrick Sims-Williams
    £21.99

    An original study revealing the history of place-names from Ireland to Anatolia, from Scotland to the Apennines, and from to Andalusia the Black Seas.

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    £21.99

    aeo Contains a very thorough review of the arguments used in the debate on the headedness of noun phrases. aeo Presents an Noun Phrase analysis, whereas recent analyses of noun phrases has been as Determiner Phrases. aeo Considers the noun as the head of the phrase, and the definite ending is not assigned syntactic status.

  • - Facts, Myths and Statistics
    by Angela (University of Rome) Marcantonio
    £21.99

    In this detailed survey of Finnish, Hungarian, Lapp and the other Uralic Languages, Angela Marcantonio shows there is in fact no scientific evidence to support the belief that they form a genetic family. If this approach is accepted, this detailed analysis will have far--reaching consequences for other assumed language families.

  • - A Linguistic Study of an Obsolescent Dialect
    by Mari Catrin (University of Cambridge) Jones
    £21.99

    This book is the first to present a comprehensive linguistic study of Jersey Norman French. Drawing on a corpus of original data, it offers historical and dialectological sketches, an assessment of language planning on Jersey, and an account of language change in progress.

  • - An Etymological Survey
    by Richard (Soft Resources Dance
    £21.99

    The most rigorous description ever undertaken of the Scandinavian influence on the vocabulary of a major Middle English text, and a new model for the collection and analysis of Norse loans in any English source.* A new survey of the etymological evidence for nearly 500 words in one of the most famous and important Middle English poems* Conducted in accordance with a groundbreaking new system of etymological classification, and with references to all relevant previous scholarship going back to the nineteenth century* Contains new insights into the etymologies, forms, meanings and textual interpretation of hundreds of Middle English words* Includes a new introduction to the scholarly study of the Old Norse influence on English vocabulary, including a detailed discussion of methodologies

  •  
    £21.99

    aeo First major and detailed evaluation of universalist claims about the development of nasalization/sound change. aeo Strongly multidiscplinary: phonological and historical approach backed by the results of experimental phonetics and supported by typological evidence. aeo Taps into resurgence of interest in nasality and language typology.

  • by Lucia (Universitat de les Illes Balears Loureiro-Porto
    £21.99

    Necessity is a primary meaning expressed diversely in world languages and whose evolution helps describe human cognitive development. By adopting a corpus-based approach, this book studies the five verbs from the history of English diachronically, from the language's origins (c. 750) to the end of the early Modern period (1710).

  • - John Gilchrist and the Analysis of the 'Hindustani' Language in the late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries
    by Richard (University of Sheffield) Steadman-Jones
    £21.99

    A detailed study of Gilchrist's grammatical praxis which presents a picture of the complex relationship between grammatical inquiry and the politics of colonial discourse in the early years of the Indian Empire.

  • by Melanie (University of Sussex) Green
    £21.99

    This book investigates the morphosyntax, semantics and discourse properties of focus and wh-constructions in Hausa, and introduces readers to aspects of the syntax of a major world language unfamiliar to most linguists.

  • - Personal Histories
    by Brown
    £21.99

    This is a collection of a linguistic autobiographiesa by 23 British linguists who played a major role in the development of the subject in Britain during the second half of the twentieth century. aeo Includes contributions from 23 major British linguists. aeo Provides an overview of the rapid growth of linguistics in the last 50 years.

  • by Stephen Pax (Scott Polar Research Institute Leonard
    £21.99

    Language, Society and Identity in early Iceland offers a much-needed exploration into the problem of linguistic and social identity construction in early Iceland, and is a fascinating account of an under examined historical-linguistic story that will spur further research and discussion amongst researchers.

  • - Diachrony and Typology
    by Silva Nurmio
    £21.99

  • by Andras Cser
    £21.99

    This work is a comprehensive corpus-based description of the synchronic segmental phonology of Classical Latin.* Provides a full description of the phonology of a dead language and also highlights how the patterns and processes described contribute to phonological theory* Research results include novel analyses of segmental phenomena, phonotactics, phonological processes, inflectional morphology, and certain diachronic questions* Informed by specific hypotheses about how phonological representations are structured and how phonological rules work, and in turn how the findings corroborate these hypotheses* Theoretically grounded and provides raw material for researchers of phonology, morphology and historical linguistics

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