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- Volume 52, Issue 1, 2025
Historiographia Linguistica - Volume 52, Issue 1, 2025
Volume 52, Issue 1, 2025
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The distributed invention of enunciation theory
Author(s): John E. Josephpp.: 1–40 (40)More LessAbstractIn the second half of the 20th century a linguistic approach emerged that aimed to complement the analysis of language structure: énonciation, centred on speakers and the act of speaking. Émile Benveniste has had his role raised to author of the theory, despite its developing simultaneously in work by Roman Jakobson and Jacques Lacan, and later Tzvetan Todorov, with each of whom he had professional and personal ties. Others who figure in its formulation are J. L. Austin, Charles Bally, Leonard Bloomfield, Jacques Damourette and Édouard Pichon, Bronisɬaw Malinowski, Hendrik Pos and, to some extent, Karl Bühler. Of particular significance is work published in 1969 by Jean Dubois and Michel Foucault, both of whom give enunciation a clearer and fuller treatment than is found in the 1970 paper by Benveniste regarded as the locus classicus. The present article argues for, not sidelining Benveniste, but approaching the invention of enunciation as dialogic – a case of distributed cognition – instead of treating it on the lines of the ‘Great Man theory of history’ which this journal’s founder, E. F. K. Koerner, worked hard to oppose.
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The Dictionary of American Regional English and the idea of dialect
Author(s): Michael Adamspp.: 41–62 (22)More LessSummaryThough originally conceived as an American dialect dictionary, on the model of the English Dialect Dictionary, the Dictionary of American Regional English (DARE) is significantly different from its predecessors, as well as theoretically and technically distinct from the dictionary the American Dialect Society thought its members would compile. DARE marks the transition from traditional dialectology to a more fluid approach to documenting and mapping variation in the second half of the twentieth century. Frederic G. Cassidy, who planned DARE and was its original chief editor, began to doubt the usefulness of the concept dialect in the 1940s, preferring to think of variation as regional, as reflected in the dictionary’s title. Regional variation resists isoglosses and reified dialect areas and instead distributes usage differently word by word, wherever the evidence leads, outliers and all. Cassidy’s innovations represent reactions both to his reading of William Dwight Whitney on dialect and to treatment of dialect in Leonard Bloomfield’s Language (1933). Cassidy’s new way of analyzing and representing variation converged with those developed in American sociolinguistics of the same period.
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The metalinguistic development of the term ‘periphrasis’ in the western grammatical tradition from Antiquity to the Enlightenment
Author(s): Beatrice Grieco and Edoardo Nardipp.: 63–101 (39)More LessSummaryIn 1993, Hoffmann published a study on the historical development of the term ‘periphrasis’ in grammars, which originally indicated a figure of speech, used for stylistic and rhetorical purposes. To date, Hoffmann’s article remains the only contribution to the question. In this paper, we further investigate the history of the morphosyntactic category of ‘periphrasis’, with special attention to practical grammars, which are not discussed by Hoffmann. The analysis of grammars dating from Antiquity to the Enlightenment confirms Hoffmann’s findings with additional data, and sheds new light on the metalinguistic development of the morphosyntactic category of ‘periphrasis’ over the centuries. From the late 15th to the 18th century, grammars, especially practical, of many European and non-European languages attest a notable terminological richness to indicate analytic constructions, understood as morphosyntactic categories (comparative and superlative, compound tenses). These grammars feature not only periphrasis and circumlocutio, which are already found in the earlier tradition, but also the verb related to the latter, circumloquor, circumscribo, and language-specific expressions, such as rodeo in Spanish and Portuguese, and tour in French. Despite the development and persistence of the grammatical connotation of periphrasis and analogous terms, ‘periphrasis’ also retains its original rhetorical usage throughout the Modern Age.
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Review of McElvenny (2024): A History of Modern Linguistics: From the beginnings to World War II
Author(s): Gerda Haßlerpp.: 125–132 (8)More LessThis article reviews A History of Modern Linguistics: From the beginnings to World War II978-1-4744-7002-5$ 120$ 29.95
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Compte rendu de Priscien (2023): Grammaire Livre VIII. Le verbe 1: Caractères généraux
Author(s): Lionel Dumartypp.: 133–140 (8)More LessThis article reviews Grammaire Livre VIII. Le verbe 1: Caractères généraux978-2-7116-3132-2
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Review of Cinato, Lahaussois & Whitman (2023): Glossing Practice: Comparative Perspectives
Author(s): Irene O’Dalypp.: 141–148 (8)More LessThis article reviews Glossing Practice: Comparative Perspectives978-1-7936-1280-9$110.00/£85.00978-1-7936-1281-6$45.00/£35.00
Volumes & issues
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Volume 52 (2025)
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Volume 51 (2024)
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Volume 50 (2023)
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Volume 49 (2022)
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Volume 48 (2021)
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Volume 47 (2020)
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Volume 46 (2019)
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Volume 45 (2018)
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Volume 44 (2017)
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Volume 43 (2016)
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Volume 42 (2015)
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Volume 41 (2014)
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Volume 40 (2013)
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Volume 39 (2012)
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Volume 38 (2011)
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Volume 37 (2010)
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Volume 36 (2009)
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Volume 35 (2008)
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Volume 34 (2007)
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Volume 33 (2006)
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Volume 32 (2005)
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Volume 31 (2004)
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Volume 30 (2003)
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Volume 29 (2002)
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Volume 28 (2001)
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Volume 27 (2000)
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Volume 26 (1999)
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Volume 25 (1998)
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Volume 24 (1997)
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Volume 23 (1996)
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Volume 22 (1995)
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Volume 21 (1994)
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Volume 20 (1993)
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Volume 19 (1992)
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Volume 18 (1991)
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Volume 17 (1990)
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Volume 16 (1989)
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Volume 15 (1988)
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Volume 14 (1987)
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Volume 13 (1986)
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Volume 12 (1985)
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Volume 11 (1984)
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Volume 10 (1983)
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Volume 9 (1982)
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Volume 8 (1981)
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Volume 7 (1980)
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Volume 6 (1979)
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Volume 5 (1978)
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Volume 4 (1977)
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Volume 3 (1976)
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Volume 2 (1975)
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Volume 1 (1974)
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