ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook of Historical Linguistics provides a survey of the field covering the methods which underpin current work; models of language change; and the importance of historical linguistics for other subfields of linguistics and other disciplines.

Divided into five sections, the volume encompass a wide range of approaches and addresses issues in the following areas:

  • historical perspectives
  • methods and models
  • language change
  • interfaces
  • regional summaries

Each of the thirty-two chapters is written by a specialist in the field and provides: a introduction to the subject; an analysis of the relationship between the diachronic and synchronic study of the topic; an overview of the main current and critical trends; and examples from primary data. The Routledge Handbook of Historical Linguistics is essential reading for researchers and postgraduate students working in this area.

Chapter 28 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 3.0 license. https://www.routledgehandbooks.com/doi/10.4324/9781315794013.ch28

 

 

chapter |42 pages

Editors' introduction

Foundations of the new historical linguistics

part |82 pages

Overviews

chapter |19 pages

Lineage and the constructive imagination

The birth of historical linguistics

chapter |22 pages

Compositionality and change

part |100 pages

Methods and models

chapter |19 pages

The Comparative Method

chapter |15 pages

The Comparative Method

Theoretical issues

chapter |29 pages

Trees, waves and linkages

Models of language diversification

chapter |22 pages

Language phylogenies

part |330 pages

Language change

chapter |22 pages

Sound change

chapter |15 pages

Phonological changes

chapter |22 pages

Morphological change

chapter |22 pages

Morphological reconstruction

chapter |13 pages

Discourse

chapter |19 pages

Etymology

part |94 pages

Regional summaries

chapter |12 pages

Indo-European

Methods and problems

chapter |29 pages

The Austroasiatic language phylum

A typology of phonological restructuring

chapter |22 pages

Pama-Nyungan

chapter |11 pages

The Pacific Northwest linguistic area

Historical perspectives