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- Volume 4, Issue 2, 2022
Evolutionary Linguistic Theory - Volume 4, Issue 2, 2022
Volume 4, Issue 2, 2022
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Inside names
Author(s): Denis Delfitto and Gaetano Fiorinpp.: 153–190 (38)More LessAbstractIn this contribution, we offer a contextualist analysis of names whereby a name N is used as a felicitous referential term in all and only those contexts of utterance in which N is intended to refer to a unique referent by all cognitive agents that are relevant in the context. This analysis has important across-the-board virtues. It reduces the distance between common nouns and names, under the insight that names are a highly specific case of a more general phenomenon consisting in the pragmatic modulation of the meaning of common nouns. It successfully ties to an important body of syntactic evidence, and contributes to elucidate, in an original and productive manner, many of the unsolved issues concerning the syntactic structure of (complex) names. Finally, it makes a number of philosophical puzzles virtually dissolve without giving up rigid reference for names, but crucially suggesting that the causal theory of reference becomes far-fetched once the linguistic structure of names and their actual use in language and cognition have been carefully evaluated.
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The cycle in language change
Author(s): Marta Tagliani and Stefan Rabanuspp.: 191–228 (38)More LessAbstractLanguage change can be conceptualized as a cyclical process of continuous renewal of the involved elements which somehow change their nature, with respect to phonological or lexico-grammatical features. A crucial aspect of such diachronic evolution is that cyclical change takes place systematically and follows regular and unidirectional patterns of development. Once the change is complete, the same developmental path will be undertaken by new linguistic items in the same cyclical fashion. In this paper, we illustrate the concept of cyclical change by discussing two examples of linguistic cycles. A first instance of cyclical development is displayed at the phonological level by the diachronic changes in the obstruent consonant system taking place from Indo-European to German through the First and the Second Sound Shift: the cycle is completed in the Cimbrian dialects. A second instance is provided by the diachronic process known as Jespersen’s cycle ([1917] 1966): sentential negation, initially expressed through a single negative marker, is later reinforced by an additional one; eventually, this second element becomes the only negative marker available in the sentence while the original marker is deleted. The discussion of the negative cycle takes also into consideration the results of an empirical research conducted on two varieties of an Italo-Romance dialect spoken in northern Italy.
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Review of Verhagen (2021): Ten Lectures on Cognitive Evolutionary Linguistics
Author(s): Alexander Laschpp.: 229–238 (10)More LessThis article reviews Ten Lectures on Cognitive Evolutionary Linguistics
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Review of Boeckx (2021): Reflections on Language Evolution: From Minimalism to Pluralism
Author(s): Gabriele Ganaupp.: 239–246 (8)More LessThis article reviews Reflections on Language Evolution: From Minimalism to Pluralism
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Construction grammar for monkeys?
Author(s): Michael Pleyer and Stefan Hartmann
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On the nature of roots
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