Obsolescence and abortive innovations in variationist approaches to language change

被引:0
作者
Brook, Marisa [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Essex, Dept Language & Linguist, Colchester, England
来源
LANGUAGE AND LINGUISTICS COMPASS | 2024年 / 18卷 / 04期
关键词
DIALECT DEATH; FRENCH; ENGLISH; EMERGENCE; NE; GRAMMAR; SPOKEN; STUFF;
D O I
10.1111/lnc3.12516
中图分类号
H [语言、文字];
学科分类号
05 ;
摘要
The focus of most variationist studies of linguistic change to date has been the emergence and increase of new forms. The opposing process-obsolescence, or the decline and loss of older variants-is less well understood. Addressing several calls for more attention to be paid to obsolescence and its properties, this article surveys case studies mostly from English and French and suggests generalisations. Obsolescence, for many reasons, is a very long process. While the linguistic factors influencing an obsolescent form often become unpredictable, the social meaning and/or pragmatic effects associated with it may strengthen rather than weaken. A special subset of obsolescent forms are abortive innovations-those that begin by increasing, but then disappear suddenly. The notion that an abortive innovation is always a subcomponent of a two-step innovation, otherwise successful, applies straightforwardly to several case studies identified in the variationist literature in recent years.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
[41]   Innovative approaches to foreign language teaching in Russian universities [J].
Bolshak, Alla ;
Voloshina, Karina .
INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION (ITSE-2020), 2020, 210
[42]   THEORETICAL ASPECTS CONCERNING THE APPROACHES TO ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING [J].
Mara, Elena Lucia .
INTED2017: 11TH INTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGY, EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE, 2017, :2423-2427
[43]   Evaluation of speech and language assessment approaches with bilingual children [J].
White, Caroline De Lamo ;
Jin, Lixian .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE & COMMUNICATION DISORDERS, 2011, 46 (06) :613-627
[44]   Investigating language change using Anglo-Norman spoken and written register data [J].
Ingham, Richard .
LINGUISTICS, 2016, 54 (02) :381-410
[45]   Furiously fast: On the speed of change in formulaic language [J].
Buerki, Andreas .
YEARBOOK OF PHRASEOLOGY, 2019, 10 (01) :5-38
[46]   Combining data and mathematical models of language change [J].
Sonderegger, Morgan ;
Niyogi, Partha .
ACL 2010: 48TH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR COMPUTATIONAL LINGUISTICS, 2010, :1019-1029
[47]   Human Information Processing Shapes Language Change [J].
Fedzechkina, Maryia ;
Chu, Becky ;
Jaeger, T. Florian .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2018, 29 (01) :72-82
[48]   Centers and peripheries: Network roles in language change [J].
Fagyal, Zsuzsanna ;
Swarup, Samarth ;
Escobar, Anna Maria ;
Gasser, Les ;
Lakkaraju, Kiran .
LINGUA, 2010, 120 (08) :2061-2079
[49]   The role of pragmatics in cyclic language change Introduction [J].
Hansen, Maj-Britt Mosegaard .
JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL PRAGMATICS, 2020, 21 (02) :165-181
[50]   How cognitive selection affects language change [J].
Li, Ying ;
Breithaupt, Fritz ;
Hills, Thomas ;
Lin, Ziyong ;
Chen, Yanyan ;
Siew, Cynthia S. W. ;
Hertwig, Ralph .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2024, 121 (01)