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Contact-induced grammatical change: towards an explicit account

Lucas, Christopher

Authors



Abstract

Language contact plays a key part among the factors leading to change in grammars, and yet the study of syntactic change, especially in the generative or innatist tradition, has tended to neglect the role of contact in this process. At the same time, work on contact-induced change remains largely descriptive, with theoretical discussion restricted mostly to the putative limits on borrowing. This article aims at moving beyond these restrictions by outlining a psycholinguistically-based account of some of the ways in which contact leads to change. This account takes Van Coetsem’s (1988, 2000) distinction between recipient-language and source-language agentivity as its starting point, building on this insight in the light of work on language acquisition and first language attrition, and showing how these principles can be integrated into a unified acquisitionist model of syntactic change in general. The model is then applied to case studies of contact-induced syntactic change in Yiddish and Berber.

Citation

Lucas, C. (2012). Contact-induced grammatical change: towards an explicit account. Diachronica. International Journal for Historical Linguistics, 29(3), 275-300. https://doi.org/10.1075/dia.29.3.01luc

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2012
Deposit Date Oct 25, 2012
Publicly Available Date Jan 2, 2112
Print ISSN 0176-4225
Electronic ISSN 1569-9714
Publisher John Benjamins Publishing
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 29
Issue 3
Pages 275-300
DOI https://doi.org/10.1075/dia.29.3.01luc
Keywords language contact