ABSTRACT

Language typology is the study of the structural similarities between languages regardless of their history, to establish a classification or typology of languages. It is a core topic of historical linguistics and is studied on all traditional linguistics degree courses. In recent years there has been increased interest the subject and it is an area we have been looking to commission a book in.
Jae Jung Song proposes to introduce the undergraduate reader to the subject, with discussion of topics which include - what is language typology and why is it studied; word order; language sampling; relative clauses; diachronic typology; and applications of language typology. There will also be discussion of the most prominent areas of research in the subject and readers will be able to review data selected from a wide range of languages to see how languages work and how differently they behave.

chapter 1|48 pages

Introducing linguistic typology

chapter 2|89 pages

Basic word order

chapter 3|73 pages

Case marking

chapter 4|46 pages

Relative clauses

chapter 5|40 pages

Causatives

chapter 6|41 pages

The application of linguistic typology

chapter 7|24 pages

European approaches to linguistic typology